Philip II of Spain’s father was a brilliant soldier and statesman named Charles V, and when he passed on, he left the world’s largest empire in the hands of his son.  Philip had been trained since childhood in the arts of leadership and diplomacy.  At age sixteen he was made Regent of Spain.  His "marriage of conquest" was to the Queen of England, Mary Tudor (known to history as "Bloody Mary" for her butchery of Protestants).  Philip was handed the world’s largest empire, encompassing the lEliz1rainbowargest King_philipii_of_spain_3territory, the most colonies, the best ports, and access to more natural resources than any other country.  But during his long reign, he would manage to squander away his position atop the world’s heap of power, and through his mistakes, allow a fledgling little island country led by an indecisive Queen to plant the seeds that would grow into world dominance.

What happened?

You might not be surprised to learn that it came down to leadership.

A quasi-war of sorts had been waged between England and Spain for decades.  Queen Elizabeth’s "gentleman pirates," including Francis Drake, John Hawkins, Walter Raliegh, Martin Frobisher, and Charles Howard, had pecked and picked away at Spain’s holdings in the New World, and had managed to disrupt and even steal large amounts of South American treasure bound for Spain’s coffers.  Drake’s circumnavigation of the globe and capture of one of Spain’s largest treasure galleons was only one example of the daring feats the English carried out at Spain’s expense.  In the meantime, King Philip was behind numerous assassination attempts directly aimed at Queen Elizabeth, and the two countries were at war against each other for the religious choice of the people of the Netherlands. 

When Queen Elizabeth sentenced Mary, Queen of Scots, to death for treason (a confirmed assassination attempt on Elizabeth), it brought the two countries to the edge of declared war.  Philip began preparations to amass a large "armada" of ships that would sail in something called The Enterprise of England.  The "Enterprise" was supposed to be a secret plan to attack the island of England itself, but the large-scale buildup of supplies and ships in Spain’s ports could hardly go unnoticed.  Sir Francis Drake was able to delay the launch of the Armada by at least a year by attacking and destroying a major fleet of ships and supplies in the port of Cadiz.

Then, somehow, peace negotiations were proferred.  Diplomats from both sides began testing the waters for terms of settlement.  Queen Elizabeth, despite violent opposition from nearly every one of her advisors, was extremely interested in a peaceful settlement.  England was a small island country, by no means able to match the enormous wealth and stature of Spain, and it had virtually no way to defend itself should armed forces actually land on her shores.  Queen Elizabeth was also a bit of a realist, and she understood the enormous cost of fighting the world’s only Super Power in a protracted war.  For these reasons, she was able to make huge concessions for the peace process as long as they didn’t compromise her principles and the things she had promised her people.

King Philip, however, was not disposed towards peace.  He sat atop the World’s richest empire, its largest military, he held most of Europe under his control, he had recently annexed Portugal and with it enormous territory in the East Indies to add to his dominance in the West Indies.  According to author Neil Hanson, "Philip’s correspondance shows that he gave not the slightest throught to any compromise.  He could have had peace in the Netherlands on several occasions, but [as Philip said himself], ‘With regard to Holland and Zealand or any other province or towns, the first step must be for them to receive and maintain alone the exercises of the Catholic religion and to subject themselves to the Roman church, without tolerating the exercise of any other religion . . . There is to be no flaw, no change, no concession by convention or otherwise of liberty of conscience or religious peace, or anything of that sort.’" 

Although Elizabeth was all for the concession of allowing religious tolerance, Philip was dead against any "liberty of conscience" whatsoever.  It became a classic struggle of tyranny versus freedom of choice, of big versus small, Goliath pushing around David.  Again, according to Hanson, "[the entire conflict] was partly about money . . . partly about political and dynastic imperatives, and partly about the loss of face that Philip had suffered through attacks on his own coast, but it was also genuinely driven by religious fundamentalism and Philip’s obsession with restoration of Europe to the Catholic faith.  A flexible and pragmatic ruler in his youth, he was now a stubborn and dogmatic old man, brooding alone . . . . the only solution that would satisfy him would be the overthrow of Elizabeth and the total destruction of the Dutch rebellion."

Instead of negotiating for peace in good faith, Philip played games.  In his own words: "I declare that my intention is that these negotiations shall never lead to any result, whatever conditions the English may offer.  On the contrary, the only object is to deceive them and to cool them in their preparations for defense, by making them believe such preperations will not be necessary." 

Analyzing the details of this history, we see that Philip’s fatal choice to launch the Armada against England came from the following four factors:

1. money

2. political and dynastic imperatives (nepotism and power)

3. the loss of face (pride)

4. religious fundamentalism (tyranny and the suppression of freedom)

The details of the Armada, its mammoth size, its incredible expense to Spain’s treasury, and its resulting failure, are story enough for a future post.  But the launching and failure of the Spanish Armada in 1588 represented the "high water mark" in the world-dominance of Spain.  Its cost, and its loss of prestige for Spain throughout the world, were blows too large from which to recover.  Even though Philip had inheBhc0264rited the world’s largest power from his father, he would hand it on as a much reduced, debt-ridden, and shrinking power.  England, a tiny island country, would rise on the ashes of the fading Spain and over the course of time would rise to become the world’s largest empire, and it would hold that position for a long time until one of its former colonies, The United States of America, would gain that postion in the twentieth century.  The entire period from the Armada in the sixteenth century to the beginning of World War I, with the American Revolution as the sole exception, would witness the rise and dominance of Great Britain as the world’s pre-eminent empire.

Leadership is critical to the success of any endeavor.  Leaders lead best when motivated by visions that build up instead of destroy, that seek to help rather than hinder, and that become more concerned about what can be accomplished than by who can be oppressed.  In the case of Philip II of Spain, his motivations were all wrong.  Money, power, pride, and oppression of the freedoms of others became the seeds of his own destruction.  At many points along the way he could have made an acceptable peace with a smaller, but stubbornly principled and belliegerent nation – but he would have nothing of it.  It was all or nothing for Philip.  He made his choice accordingly, and his empire dwindled to insignificance as a result.  Image

Remember the story of the Armada as you lead in your life.  Be careful of your motivations.  Never get suckered into believing that oppressing the freedoms of others, grabbing for money, fighting for power, or struggling to regain "lost" pride are worthy pursuits.  Don’t get fooled into launching your own "Enterprise of England."  If you do, you can rely on having to face a Sir Francis Drake, a Sir Walter Raliegh, or any number of individual privateers who will take to the waters to oppose you.  And never underestimate the power of a storm or two to dash your ships on the rocky shores.

It’s much better to lead from a position of integrity, to fight for good, to stand for freedom, and to defend the individual and his or her rights.  That’s the side on which all the heroes of history have found themselves.  That’s the side on which the true leaders live!

Lead on, and if you lead for good, fear no Armada that comes against you!   

   

    

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7 responses to “Launching an Armada – Buyer Beware”

  1. Owen Derry Avatar
    Owen Derry

    Chris:
    One could draw many parallels between this story and events of today, and revel in the fact that a big power can fall due to its own avarice and ignorance. The parallel I would like to bring up is the United States today.
    After World War II, the U.S. enjoyed a few decades of great economic growth since a great portion of the world’s industrial might had been destroyed between 1939 and 1945. And we got complacent.
    Then Japan started to become competitive. Germany became competitive. Union wages in the U.S. did not change quickly or sufficiently enough to match world labor costs. Lyndon Johnson’s promise of The Great Society, while laudable, took responsibility for helping others out of private hands and put it into the hands of the Federal government (along with more tax money!!). The U.S. government involved itself in the bailout of Chrysler. Tax laws favored spending over saving.
    Instead of looking to our own competitive greatness and creativity, we started to look to the government for answers. At the same time, due to Watergate and other scandals, many people do not trust the government and are willing to complain. However, we need people who will do.
    The big power that we face today, I believe, is something you and Orrin have pointed out may times — our own complacency and lack of long-term vision.
    Thus, the Team and the media war that you, Orrin, and the Team leadership have been waging for many a year. Recent events may have temporarily taken our vision away from this war (and perhaps rightly so, for the short term), but I know I need to get back into the long-term war.
    The future of my family and my country depend on it.

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  2. Evelyn Avatar
    Evelyn

    Chris,
    I just wanted to know if you have any book suggestions for children to read? I have a granddaughter who is 6 1/2 yrs old & in first grade & wanted to find some positive books for her to read. Thanks

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  3. Chris Brady Avatar
    Chris Brady

    Evelyn:
    I will check with Terri and also look through my children’s book shelves. I am sure I can get back to you with some solid suggestions. Also, what we have done in our family, is make a habit of going to used book stores and finding the racks of children’s books that were written in the thirties, forties, and fifties. Unlike the hit-or-miss fare you might find being published for children today (most of which are about wizzards and magic)these books are clean, based upon history, and patriotic. I have never been disappointed with any of these purchases, and the most expensive one was probably a couple of bucks! Try it and see if you like it. It has become a fun outing for us: every month or so we go into our favorite used book store and hunt for treasure. I hope this helps, and if I can come up with some specific titles, I’ll post them here.
    Thanks!
    Chris

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  4. DaveC Avatar
    DaveC

    Owen,
    I agree with you wholeheartely. Although Chris and Orrin and the leadership of TEAM have never lost their focus on the big picture, I think that many of us, myself included, have focused on (strained out) the gnat of the Q/A situation and taken our eyes off of (swallowed) the camel of our complacency and the larger battle against a spiritual foe. I hope that no one is offended about what or whom I have compared to a gnat in borrowing a Biblical illustration from Jesus.
    DaveC

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  5. Ian from Texas Avatar
    Ian from Texas

    Chris,
    I went to church this morning. I barely made it due to a small obstacles.
    The dreaded daylightsavingstime obstacles. I slid sideways into the parking lot at full ramming speed. I sprinted into the church and slid into the seat next to my sisters just as the last song finished and the Pastor got up to deliver the messege.
    My Team mate Jose was supposed to go with me today, but a phone call from Jose was what alerted me to my failure to spring forward. Our plan was lacking in the spring forward department.
    If the rapture does not occur by next Sunday, Jose has assured me he will attend church with me.
    The messege today was a series (part 2)called “Snapshots of Jesus”.
    Pastor Greg spoke about how the men who were closest to Jesus, who were taught directly by Jesus, sometimes missed the point of his teachings. They had to struggle with the learning sometimes.
    Today we were taught specifically about Peter. We were given some examples of how he earned his name, “Rock”, and how sometimes he really “got the point”.
    When Jesus asked those closest to him, “Who do you think I am?”
    Peter nailed it. Christ. Son of the Living God.
    At other times, Peter didn’t seem to have a clue.
    He had his own doubts and struggles.
    When Jesus told those closest to him of the things he would endure in Jerusalem, that he would be killed, Peter just couldn’t deal with it.
    When he insisted it could not happen, when he rebuked Jesus, he obviously did not see the big picture.
    Jesus even said to him, “Get behind me Satan…”.
    That had to hurt.
    I find myself feeling and acting like Peter all the time. Don’t get me wrong, I am not going to attempt to put current events on the same level as events from the Bible. But, just as I have seen and used the David vs. Goliath story during the past 6.5 months, I feel that what I was taught today applies.
    For me personally, I can look back at my life and see so many times when God wanted me to go a certain way. The only problem is that I didn’t want to go that way. Call it peace and affluence, call it the easier way, call it the path of least resistence, or call it the path of safety.
    My faith, like Peter, has been week at times.
    I have failed to accept the way God wants me to go, due to fear.
    Why is it so easy to see in retrospect,looking back? Why is justification of our own will so blinding? Maybe it is just a part of being a fallen human. Lord knows I am not perfect. I totally whiffed on the daylight savings thing.
    Sometimes we are given the gift of grace. Let me explain.
    I have an almost 22 year old step daughter who lives at home again. She is as High I/Sanguine as a human being can get (without launching into orbit, or spontaneously combusting) and this has never coexisted well with my D/C temperment. I can sum it up this way, she is always having a blast, and I am constantly griping about it and pointing out her faults.
    (Due to the Team training system, I have spent quite a bit more time looking at my own faults and taking it a lot easier on her)
    We went to dinner on Friday night, just her and I. It was fantastic. We talked more in one meal than we have in months combined. It was almost miraculous.
    When I got home from chruch this morning, I sensed something was wrong. My step daughter was talking with my wife and seemed upset. Due to our past history she NEVER talks to me about what is going on in her life. I thought about that and it made me sad.
    When my step daughter finished talking to my wife, I called her into the office and asked what was going on. At first she really didn’t want to tell me, but after a last ditch effort on my part, she told me what was going on.
    I simply asked her if she wanted a man’s perspective, and she said yes. After we talked for a while, I told her how proud of her I was. She is really starting to listen to that little voice inside. The voice that lets you know right from wrong.
    She just came in here a little while ago and kissed me on the cheek and said, “Thanks for the advice. I took it and everything worked out fine.”
    Two miracles in one weekend. I am so blessed.
    I know this comment doesn’t really fit into the armada article, but since when have I ever let that stop me? I will wait for the continuation of this article, and really try to stay on topic.
    Thank You Chris.
    Thank You Team.
    Ian from Texas

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  6. DaveC Avatar
    DaveC

    Ian,
    Once again, I am really proud of you, and I am really proud of the TEAM system that has made you the man you are today.
    Thank you Chris and Orrin for making stories like this not only possible but common in the TEAM!
    DaveC

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  7. Sunshine1@time Avatar
    Sunshine1@time

    Hi Evelyn. I have just found two series that my 7 year old (also in first grade) daughter has enjoyed. She absolutely loves these books:
    One series is calledBreyer Stablemates (I found ours at KMart). All the stories are about a girl and a horse – very cute. Titles are:
    “Starlight”
    “Belle”
    “Lucky”
    “Penny”
    Another series is The Puppy Place, Where every puppy finds a home, by Ellen Miles. Titles are:
    “Patches”
    “Buddy”
    “Rascal”
    “Scout”
    Both book series are published by Scholastic books.
    I hope this helps.

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