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Item of Interest
Editor's Note: The Saudi-American Forum would like to thank The American Conservative for permission to share this article with our readers. It appeared as the cover story in the March 1, 2004 issue. No End to War On the dust jacket of his book,
Richard Perle appends a Washington Post depiction of
himself as the “intellectual guru of the hard-line
neoconservative movement in foreign policy.” The guru’s reputation,
however, does not survive a reading. Indeed, on putting down
Perle’s new book the thought recurs: the neoconservative
moment may be over. For they are not only losing their hold on
power, they are losing their grip on reality. An End to Evil: How to Win
the War on Terror opens on a note of hysteria. In the War on
Terror, writes Perle, “There is no middle way for Americans:
It is victory or holocaust.” “What is new since 9/11 is the
chilling realization that the terrorist threat we thought we had
contained” now menaces “our survival as a nation.” But how is our survival as a
nation menaced when not one American has died in a terrorist
attack on U.S. soil since 9/11? Are we really in imminent peril
of a holocaust like that visited upon the Jews of Poland? “[A] radical
strain within Islam,” says Perle, “ ..seeks to
overthrow our civilization and remake the nations of the
West into Islamic societies, imposing on the whole world
its religion and laws.” Well, yes. Militant Islam has preached that since the 7th century. But what are the odds the Boys of Tora Bora are going to “overthrow our civilization” and coerce us all to start praying to Mecca five times a day?
In his own review of An End
to Evil, Joshua Micah Marshall picks up this same scent of
near-hysteria over the Islamic threat: The book conveys a general sense that America is at war with Islam itself anywhere and everywhere: the contemporary Muslim world .. is depicted as one great cauldron of hate, murder, obscurantism, and deceit. If our Muslim adversaries are not to destroy Western civilization, we must gird for more battles. To suggest Frum and Perle are
over the top is not to imply we not take seriously the threat of
terror attacks on airliners, in malls, from dirty bombs, or, God
forbid, a crude atomic device smuggled in by Ryder truck or
container ship. Yet even this will never “overthrow our
civilization.” In the worst of terror attacks,
we lost 3,000 people. Horrific. But at Antietam Creek, we lost
7,000 in a day’s battle in a nation that was one-ninth as
populous. Three thousand men and boys perished every week for
200 weeks of that Civil War. We Americans did not curl up and
die. We did not come all this way because we are made of sugar
candy. Germany and Japan suffered 3,000
dead every day in the last two years of World War II, with every
city flattened and two blackened by atom bombs. Both came back
in a decade. Is al-Qaeda capable of this sort of devastation
when they are recruiting such scrub stock as Jose Padilla and
the shoe bomber? In the war we are in, our
enemies are weak. That is why they resort to the weapon of the
weak—terror. And, as in the Cold War, time is on America’s
side. Perseverance and patience are called for, not this panic. In
25 years, militant Islam has seized three countries: Iran,
Sudan, and Afghanistan. We toppled the Taliban almost without
losing a man. Sudan is a failed state. In Iran, a generation has
grown up that knows nothing of Savak or the Great Satan but
enough about the mullahs to have rejected them in back-to-back
landslides. The Iranian Revolution has reached Thermidor.
Wherever Islamism takes power, it fails. Like Marxism, it does
not work. Yet, assume it makes a comeback.
So what? Taken together, all 22 Arab nations do not have the GDP
of Spain. Without oil, their exports are the size of
Finland’s. Not one Arab nation can stand up to Israel, let
alone the United States. The Islamic threat is not strategic,
but demographic. If death comes to the West it will be because
we embraced a culture of death—birth control, abortion,
sterilization, euthanasia. Western man is dying as Islamic man
migrates north to await his passing and inherit his estate. Said young Lincoln in his Lyceum
address, “If destruction be our lot, we must ourselves be its
author and finisher. As a nation of freemen, we must live
through all time, or die by suicide.” In his first inaugural address,
FDR admonished, “[T]he only thing we have to fear is fear
itself—nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror which
paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into advance.” Fear is what Perle and his
co-author David Frum are peddling to stampede America into
serial wars. Just such fear-mongering got us into Iraq, though,
we have since discovered, Iraq had no hand in 9/11, no ties to
al-Qaeda, no weapons of mass destruction, no nuclear program,
and no plans to attack us. Iraq was never “the clear and
present danger” the authors insist she was. Calling their book a “manual
for victory,” they declaim: For us, terrorism remains the great evil of our time, and the war against this evil, our generation’s great cause. We do not believe that Americans are fighting this evil to minimize it or to manage it. We believe they are fighting to win—to end this evil before it kills again and on a genocidal scale. There is no middle way for Americans: It is victory or holocaust. But no nation can “end
evil.” Evil has existed since Cain rose up against his brother
Abel and slew him. A propensity to evil can be found in every
human heart. And if God accepts the existence of evil, how do
Frum and Perle propose to “end” it? Nor can any nation
“win the war on terror.” Terrorism is simply a term for the
murder of non-combatants for political ends. Revolutionary terror has been
around for as long as this Republic. It was used by
Robespierre’s Committee on Public Safety and by People’s
Will in Romanov Russia. Terror has been the chosen weapon of
anarchists, the IRA, Irgun, the Stern Gang, Algeria’s FLN, the
Mau Mau, MPLA, the PLO, Black September, the Basque ETA,
Hezbollah, Islamic Jihad, Hamas, the Al Aksa Martyrs Brigade,
SWAPO, ZANU, ZAPU, the Tupamaros, Shining Path, FARC, the ANC,
the V.C., the Huks, Chechen rebels, Tamil Tigers, and the FALN
that attempted to assassinate Harry Truman and shot up the House
floor in 1954, to name only a few. Accused terrorists have won the
Nobel Peace Prize: Begin, Arafat, Mandela. Three lie in
mausoleums in the capitals of nations they created: Lenin, Mao,
Ho. Others are the fathers of their countries like Ben Bella and
Jomo Kenyatta. A terrorist of the Black Hand ignited World War I
by assassinating the Archduke Ferdinand. Yet Gavrilo Princep has
a bridge named for him in Sarajevo. The murder of innocents for
political ends is evil, but to think we can “end” it is
absurd. Cruel and amoral men, avaricious for power and
“immortality,” will always resort to it. For, all too often,
it succeeds. But what must America do to
attain victory in her war on terror? Say the authors: “We must hunt
down the individual terrorists before they kill our people or others
.. We must deter all regimes that use terror as a weapon
of state against anyone, American or not” [emphasis
added]. Astonishing. The authors say
America is responsible for defending everyone, everywhere from
terror and deterring any and all regimes that might use terror
—against anyone, anywhere on earth. But there are 192 nations.
Scores of regimes from Liberia to Congo to Cuba, from Zimbabwe
to Syria to Uzbekistan, and from Iran to Sudan to the Afghan
warlords of the Northern Alliance who fought on our side—have
used torture and terror to punish enemies. Are we to fight them
all? Well, actually, no. Excepting
North Korea, the authors’ list of nations that need to be
attacked reads as though it were drawn up in the Israeli Defense
Ministry. By the second paragraph, Perle and Frum have given us
a short list of priority targets: “The war on terror is not
over, it has barely begun. Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, and Hamas still
plot murder.” Now
al-Qaeda was responsible for 9/11. But when did Hamas attack us?
And if Israel can co-exist and negotiate with Hezbollah, why is
it America’s duty to destroy Hezbollah? Iran and North Korea,
the authors warn, “present intolerable threats to American
security. We must move boldly against them both and against all
other sponsors of terrorism as well: Syria, Libya and Saudi
Arabia. And we don’t have much time.” “Why have we put up with
[Syria] as long as we have?” the authors demand. They call for
a cut-off of Syria’s oil and an ultimatum to Assad: Get Syrian
troops out of Lebanon, hand over all terrorist suspects, end
support for Hezbollah, stop agitating against Israel, and adopt
a “Western orientation”—or you, too, get the Saddam
treatment. But what has Syria done to us?
And if Assad balks do we bomb Damascus? Invade? Where do we get
the troops? What if the Syrians, too, resort to guerrilla war? Bush’s father made Hafez
al-Assad
an ally in the Gulf War. Ehud Barak offered Assad 99.5 percent
of the Golan Heights. Why, then, must Bashir Assad’s regime be
destroyed—by us? “We don’t have much time,”
say Frum and Perle. But what is Assad doing that warrants
immediate attack? Is he, too, buying yellowcake from Niger? Colonel Khaddafi is now paying
billions in reparations for Pan Am 103, giving up his weapons of
mass destruction, and inviting U.S. inspectors in to verify his
disarmament. Why is it imperative we overthrow him? While the Saudis have been
diffident allies in the War on Terror, they are not America’s
enemies. They pumped oil to keep prices down in the first Gulf
War. They looked the other way as U.S. fighter-bombers flew out
of Prince Sultan Air Base in Operation Iraqi Freedom. Yet the
Saudis are directed to provide us “with the utmost cooperation
in the war on terror,” or we will invade, detach their
oil-rich eastern province, and occupy it. But why? If the monarchy falls
and bin Laden’s acolytes replace it, how would that make us
more secure in our own country? What did Iran do to justify war
against her? According to Perle and Frum, But that atrocity occurred a
dozen years ago, long before the reform government of President
Mohammad Khatami was elected. And if Iran was behind an attack
on a Jewish community center in Buenos Aires, why did Argentina
and Israel not avenge these deaths? Why is retribution our
responsibility? It was not Americans who were the victims, and
the attack occurred 5,000 miles from the United States. The Frum-Perle invocation of the
Monroe Doctrine is both cynical and comical. If they were
genuinely concerned about violations of the Monroe Doctrine, why
did they not include Cuba on their target list, a “state
sponsor of terror” 90 miles from our shores that has hosted
Soviet missiles and, according to Undersecretary of State John
Bolton, is developing chemical and biological weapons? Why did
Saudi Arabia make the cut but not Cuba? Might it have something
to do with proximity and propinquity? For Iran, there can be no
reprieve. “The regime must go,” say our authors, because
Ayatollah Khamenei has But where in the Constitution is
the president empowered to “toss dictators aside”? And if it
took 150,000 U.S. soldiers to toss Saddam aside, how many troops
do Frum and Perle think it will take to occupy the capital of a
nation three times as large and populous and toss the ayatollah
aside? How many dead and wounded would our war hawks consider an
acceptable price for being rid of the mullahs? As South Korea favors
appeasement, they write, we must take the lead, demand that
North Korea surrender all nuclear materials and shut down all
missile sites. If Kim Jong Il balks, we should move U.S. troops
back to safety beyond artillery and rocket range of the DMZ and
launch preemptive strikes on known North Korean nuclear sites
and impose a naval and air blockade. As for the South Koreans,
they should probably brace themselves. “We have no doubt how
such a war would end,” say the authors. They also had no doubt
how the Iraqi war would end. Is the Perle-Frum vision for the
suffering people of North Korea a future of freedom and
democracy? Not exactly: It may be that the only way out of the decade-long crisis on the Korean peninsula is the toppling of Kim Jong Il and his replacement by a North Korean communist who is more subservient to China. If so, we should accept that outcome. Swell. America is to fight a
second Korean War that could entail a nuclear strike on our
troops, but, when we have won, we should accept a communist
North Korea that is a vassal of Beijing. How many dead and
wounded are our AEI warlords willing to accept to make Pyongyang
a puppet of Beijing? But the Frum-Perle enemies’
list is not complete. France, if she does not shape up, is to be
treated as an enemy. From every page of this book
there oozes a sense of urgency that borders on the desperate for
action this day: “We can feel the will to win ebbing in
Washington, we sense the reversion to the bad old habits of
complacency and denial.” The neocons are not wrong here.
With the cost of war at $200 billion and rising, with deaths
mounting, and with the possibility growing that Iraq could
collapse in chaos and civil war, President Bush appears to be
experiencing buyer’s remorse about the lemon he was sold by
Perle and friends. They
promised him a “cakewalk,” that we would be hailed as
“liberators,” that democracy would take root in Iraq and
flourish in the Middle East, that Palestinians and Israelis
would break bread and make peace. With Lord Melbourne, Bush must
be muttering, “What all the wise men promised has not
happened, and what all the damn fools said would happen has come
to pass.” What do Perle and Frum see as
our decisive failing in Iraq?
But of all our
mistakes, probably the most serious was our unwillingness
to allow the Iraqi National Congress, Iraq’s leading
anti-Saddam resistance movement, to form a provisional
government after the fall of Baghdad. In 1944, we took
care to let French troops enter Paris before U.S. or
British forces. We should have shown equal tact in 2003. Why was Perle’s protégé
passed over? Because the “INC terrified the Saudis and
therefore terrified those in our government who wished to
placate the Saudis.” The damned Arabists at State did it
again. Hastily written, replete with
errors, with no index, An End to Evil is a brief in
defense of neoconservatives against their impending indictment
on charges they lied us into a war that may prove our greatest
disaster since Vietnam. And the charge of deliberate deceit is
not without merit. In mid-December 2001, in a
column distributed by Copley News, Perle asserted that Saddam
“is busily at work on a nuclear weapon .. it’s simply a
matter of time before he acquires nuclear weapons.” Naming Khidir Hamza, “one of
the people who ran the nuclear weapons program for Saddam,” as
his source, Perle gave credence to Hamza’s tale of 400 uranium
enrichment facilities spread all over Iraq. “Some of them look
like farmhouses, some of them look like classrooms, some of them
look like warehouses. You’ll never find them.” Only
“preemptive action” can save us, said Perle. By the end of 2001, according to
Perle, the threat of a nuclear-armed Saddam was imminent: For those unpersuaded that
Saddam was a strategic threat, there were his links to the 9/11
massacre. Saddam’s “collaboration with terrorism is well
documented,” wrote Perle, “Evidence of a meeting in Prague
between a senior Iraqi intelligence agent and Mohamed Atta, the
September 11 ringleader, is convincing.”
did the neocons get the war they wanted. And after America
fought the war for which they had beaten the drums, how do Perle
& Co. explain why it did not turn out as they assured us it
would? Answer: any disaster in Iraq,
the authors argue, will be due to the venality and cowardice of
the State Department, CIA, FBI, retired generals, and
ex-ambassadors bought off by the Saudis. “We have offered
concrete recommendations equal to the seriousness of the threat,
and the softliners have not, because we have wanted to fight and
they have not.” Which brings us back to the
point made at the outset: the neocon moment may be passing, for
they appear to be losing their grip on reality as well as their
influence on policy. Rather than looking for new wars to involve
us more deeply in the Middle East, Bush and Rumsfeld seem to be
looking for the next exit ramp out of our Mesopotamian morass.
“No war in ‘04” is said to be the watchword of Karl Rove. Moreover, Americans are coming
to appreciate that, all that bombast about “unipolar”
moments and “American empire” aside, there are limits to
American power, and we are approaching them. U.S. ground forces
of 480,000 are stretched thin. There is grumbling in Army,
Reserve, and National Guard units about too many tours too far
from home. Backing off his “axis-of-evil” rhetoric, Bush
said in this year’s State of the Union, “We have no desire
to dominate, no ambitions of empire.” The long retreat of American
empire has begun. In Washington, there are rumors
of the return of James Baker and the imminent departure of Paul
Wolfowitz. As Frederick the Great, weary of the antics and
peculations of his house guest Voltaire, said, “One squeezes
the orange and throws away the rind.” Moreover, the radicalism of
their schemes for two, three, many wars, seems, given our
embroilment in Iraq, not only rash but also rooted in unreality.
Before Bush could take us to war with any of these regimes, he
would have to convince his country of the necessity of war and
persuade Congress to grant him the power to go to war. Yet
absent a new atrocity on the magnitude of 9/11, directly
traceable to one of the regimes on the Perle-Frum list, the
president could not win this authority. Nor does it appear he
intends to try. And were the United States to attack Libya,
Syria, or Saudi Arabia, we would alienate every ally in the
Islamic world and Europe—including Tony Blair’s Britain. To
fight these wars and occupy these nations would bleed our armed
forces and mandate a return to the draft. But how would any of
these wars make us more secure from terrorism here at home? Indeed, it is because Americans
cannot see the correlation between the wars the authors demand
and security at home that Frum and Perle must resort to
fear-mongering about holocausts, the end of civilization, and
our demise as a nation. If it is America we defend, An
End to Evil makes no sense. The Perle-Frum prescription for
permanent war makes sense only if it is the mission of the armed
forces of the United States to make the Middle East safe for
Sharon—and here we come to the heart of the quarrel between
us. On Sept. 11, al-Qaeda attacked
us. Al-Qaeda is our enemy, not Syria, Libya, or Saudi Arabia.
And the way to cut off al-Qaeda and kill it is to isolate it
from all Arab and Islamic nations and centers of power including
Syria, Libya, Saudi Arabia, and Iran. None of these nations had a hand
in 9/11. All have a vital interest in not being linked to an
al-Qaeda for whom an enraged superpower is on the mortal hunt.
Thus, no matter the character of these regimes, we have
interests in common. And if Bush can use carrots to get Bashir
Assad to help us find and finish al-Qaeda—as his father got
Assad’s father to help us expel Iraq from Kuwait—let us make
Syria an ally rather than another enemy of the United States. But here is the rub: The neocons
do not want to narrow our list of enemies. They do not want to
confine America’s war to those who attacked us. They want to
expand our list of enemies to include Israel’s enemies. They
want to escalate and widen what Chris Matthews calls “the
Firemen’s War” into a war for hegemony in the Middle East.
They had hoped to exploit 9/11 to erect an empire, and as they
see the vision vanish, their desperation knows no bounds. That great American military
mind Col. John Boyd once described strategy as appending to
yourself as many centers of power as possible and isolating your
enemy from as many centers of power as possible. This
was the strategy used by Bush I in the Gulf War. He persuaded
Russia and China to sign on in the Security Council, Germany and
Japan to finance his war, Syria and Egypt to send soldiers,
Britain and France to help us fight it. By giving everyone a
stake in an American victory—call it imperial bribery, if you
will—Bush I lined up the world against Iraq. As did George W.
Bush, brilliantly, in Afghanistan. But what Frum and Perle are
pressing on him now is an altogether opposite strategy. They
want Bush to expand the war, broaden the theater of operations,
multiply our enemies, and ignore our allies. If Bush should
adopt this strategy, it would be America and Israel against the
Arab and Islamic world with Europe neutral and almost all of
Asia rooting for our humiliation. Let it be said: it is vital to
victory over al-Qaeda, to the security of our country, the
safety of our people, and our broader interests in an Arab and
Islamic world of 57 nations that stretches from Morocco to
Malaysia that we not let the neocons conflate our war on terror
with their war for hegemony. Neocons believe the Palestinian
Authority must be crushed, Arafat eliminated, and the Golan
Heights, West Bank, and East Jerusalem held by Israel forever.
They want Hezbollah eradicated, Syria denatured, the Saudi
monarchy brought down. Let them so believe. But their agenda is
not America’s agenda, and their fight is not America’s
fight. There is no vital U.S. interest
in whose flag flies over the Golan or East Jerusalem, when Barak
was willing to give up both. But if we allow the
neoconservatives to morph our war on al-Qaeda into Israel’s
war for Palestine, our war will never end. And that is the
hidden agenda of the neoconservatives: permanent war for their
permanent empowerment. As Frum and Perle concede, this is “our
generation’s great cause.” “Who are those guys?” Butch
and Sundance asked. Indeed, who are these men who would plunge
our country into serial wars of preemption and retribution
across the arc of crisis from Libya to Korea? Frum is not even an American. He
is a Canadian who did not become a citizen until offered a job
in the Bush speechwriting shop. He was cashiered after one year
when his wife bragged on the Internet that David invented the
“axis-of-evil” phrase. Expelled from the White House, Frum
ratted out his old colleagues in a “hot” book and got
himself hired by National Review, where he produced a
cover story about a dirty dozen “Unpatriotic Conservatives”
who hate neocons, hate Bush, hate the GOP, hate America, and
“wish to see the United States defeated in the War on
Terror.” Frum ordered all 12 purged from
the conservative movement. (And we must, in fairness, report
that all three editors of this magazine [American Conservative] and four regular writers
were among the 12 who went to the stake.) Who is Perle? Unlike
Frum, a
cipher on foreign policy, Perle has been a serious player since
the Nixon era. But throughout those years he has betrayed a
passionate attachment to a foreign power. In 1996, Perle
co-authored “A Clean Break,” a now-famous paper urging
Benjamin Netanyahu to dump the Oslo Accords, seize the West
Bank, and confront Syria. The road to Damascus lies through
Baghdad, Perle told the receptive Israeli Prime Minister. Then an adviser to Republican
candidate Robert Dole, Perle was thus secretly urging a foreign
government to abrogate a peace accord supported by his own
government. In 1998, he and other neoconservatives signed a
letter to then President Clinton urging the United States to
initiate all-out war on Iraq and pledging neoconservative
support if Clinton would launch it. Query: why is Perle permitted to
retain his post at the Department of Defense while agitating for
wars on four or five countries, including Saudi Arabia, a friend
of the United States? Why does President Bush put up with this?
His father would never have tolerated it. The neocons have also begun to
injure their reputations and isolate themselves with the
nastiness and irrationality of their attacks. French cannon once
bore the inscription ultima ratio regum, the last
argument of kings. The toxic charge of “Anti-Semite!” has
become the last argument of the neocons. But they have wheeled
out that cannon too many times. People are less intimidated now.
They have seen men look into its muzzle and walk away. Gen. Anthony Zinni, former head
of Centcom, is a hero of Vietnam. He opposed war with Iraq,
arguing that the U.S. military was overstretched and we would
unleash forces we could not control. In an interview, Zinni
related his astonishment at the vapidity of the Wolfowitz clique
with which he had to deal at the Department of Defense: New York Times columnist
David Brooks has also begun to smear critics of the neocons as
anti-Semites. In the word “neocon,” he writes, the “con”
stands for conservative and the “neo” stands for Jewish. But the problem for neocons is
not that so many are Jewish, but that so few are conservative.
Lawrence Kaplan, a Perle colleague who co-authored a book with
William Kristol, after reading An End to Evil, declared:
“This is not conservatism. It is liberalism, with very sharp
teeth.” If the neocons purport to see
ethnic hatred in everyone else’s motives, is it unfair to
explore for an ethnic affinity in their own? Why does every
grand strategy neocons advance, from “American empire” to
“benevolent global hegemony” to “a Pax Americana”
to “world democratic revolution” have as its centerpiece
solidarity with Sharon and a vigorous wielding of American power
against all the enemies of Israel? Why is every peace plan proposed
or endorsed by a president to give the Palestinians a home of
their own—the Rogers Plan, the Oslo accords, Camp David, the
Taba Plan, the Saudi Plan, the Mitchell Plan, the Road Map—a
Munich sellout? Why is any American patriot, who demands that
Ariel Sharon stop building settlements on Palestinian land and
walling off Jerusalem, a State Department Arabist, a pawn of the
Texas oil lobby, a Coughlinite, an anti-Semite, or a
bought-and-paid-for lickspittle of the Saudis? The United States remains
committed morally and politically to the security and survival
of Israel and to providing her with the weaponry to guarantee
it. No president is going to back off that commitment. But
because Israel is a friend does not mean that the Sharonites
have preemptive absolution to settle or seize Arab lands or
permanently to deny Arab peoples the rights we preach to the
world. In our own national interests, we must say so—in the
clear. This is a time for truth. With a
mighty and hostile Soviet Empire no longer militarily present in
the Maghreb and Middle East, U.S. and Israeli strategic
interests have ceased to coincide. And with nightly pictures of
Palestinian suffering on Al Jazeera, they have begun to collide. Thus between traditional
conservatives and neoconservatives a breach has been opened and
an irreconcilable conflict has arisen. We of the Old Right only
have one country. We believe U.S. foreign policy must be
determined by what is best for America. And what is best for
America is what our forefathers taught: If you would preserve
this Republic, stay out of foreign wars, avoid “permanent
alliances,” beware of “passionate attachments” to nations
not your own. In 1778, Washington rejoiced in
the alliance with France. But when victory was won, that
alliance became an entanglement that could drag the Republic
into Europe’s wars. American statesmen who had celebrated the
French alliance now sought to sever it, and, under Adams,
succeeded. With the end of the Cold War, an
alliance with Israel has ceased to be central to U.S. interests.
Indeed, our reputation as armorers and allies of Israel only
damages us as Sharon rampages through the West Bank and Gaza
walling off Arab land and denying to Palestinians that very
right of self-determination we Americans espouse. Sharon is
making hypocrites of us, and we are cowards for permitting it. To the neocons, however, Zionism
is second nature. They cannot conceive of a foreign policy that
is good for America that does not entail absolute solidarity
with Israel. They are dangerously close to imbibing the
poisonous brew that drove Jonathan Pollard to treason: If it is
good for Israel, it cannot be bad for America. To evade admission of the
transparent truth, neocons have begun to rationalize their
passionate attachment, to sublimate it. “The Arab-Israeli
quarrel is not a cause of Islamic extremism,” Frum and
Perle protest. But when every returning
journalist and diplomat and every opinion survey says it is
America’s uncritical support for Israeli repression of the
Palestinians that makes us hated in the region, how can honest
men write this? Have they blinded themselves to the truth
because it is too painful? We stand by Israel, writes
Irving Kristol, because America is an “ideological” nation,
“like the Soviet Union of yesteryear.” We and Israel are
democracies, the Arab countries are not, and that is all there
is to it. In the Cold War the United
States welcomed as allies Chiang Kai-shek, Salazar, Franco,
Somoza, the Shah, Suharto, Syngman Rhee, Park Chung Hee and the
Korean generals, Greek colonels, military regimes in Brazil,
Argentina, and Turkey, Marcos, and Pinochet because these
autocrats proved far more reliable than democratists like Nehru,
Olaf Palme, Willy Brandt, and Pierre Trudeau. When it comes to
wars that threaten us, hot or cold, we Americans are at one with
Nietzsche, “A state, it is the coldest of all cold
monsters.” India is democratic and 200
times the size of Israel. Yet in India’s wars with Pakistan,
we tilted toward Pakistan. Why? Because the Pakistanis were
allies, and India sided with Moscow. That India was democratic
and Pakistan autocratic made no difference to us. As for Israel, has America
really given her $100 billion and taken her side in every Arab
quarrel because she is a democracy? Tell it to Tony Judt. When this
British historian proposed—given the impossibility of
separating Arabs from Jews on the West Bank—that Israel annex
the West Bank, become a bi-national state, and give Palestinians
equal rights, neocons went berserk. Frum called Judt’s idea
“genocidal liberalism” that would leave Jews exposed to
slaughter. John Podhoretz declared it “unthinkable” and
“the definition of intellectual corruption.” “[H]aughty
and ugly,” said the New Republic, which hurled Judt
from its masthead. But if the just solution to the
South African problem was to abolish bantustans and create a
one-man, one-vote democracy, why is that not even a debatable
solution to the Palestinian problem? In temperament, too,
neoconservatives have revealed themselves as the antithesis of
conservative. In the depiction of scholar Claes Ryn, they are
the “neo-Jacobins” of modernity whose dominant trait is
conceit. But it is always unwise of
courtiers to boast of their influence with the prince. And now
the neocons have outed themselves. We all know who they are. We
all have the coordinates. We all have them bracketed. With the heady days of the fall
of Baghdad behind us and our country ensnared in a Lebanon of
our own, neocons seem fearful that it is they who will be made
to take the fall if it all turns out badly in Iraq, as McNamara
and his Whiz Kids had to take the fall for Vietnam.
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Saudi-American Forum |
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