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Rumors
of a Neocon Death Are Highly Exaggerated
by
Leon Hadar
by Leon Hadar
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There is an
element of Schadenfreude in the reaction of critics of Washington's
neoconservatives to the policy setbacks and ideological turbulence
that their erstwhile bureaucratic rivals and ideological antagonists
have been experiencing in recent weeks. With the humiliating “resignation”
of Defense Secretary Donald
Rumsfeld a day after the Democrats, carried by populist antiwar
sentiment, won both the House and the Senate, the neocons have lost
one of their two most powerful patrons in the George W. Bush administration.
Adding insult
to injury, replacing Rumsfeld in the Pentagon will be Robert Gates,
a leading member of the “realist” foreign policy establishment that
dominated the George H.W. Bush administration. Many members of this
old-school cadre, including former National Security Adviser Brent
Scowcroft and ex-Secretary of State James Baker, have disapproved
of the neoconservative agenda adopted by the younger Bush, including
the Iraq War and the ambitious Wilsonian campaign to “democratize”
the Middle East.
In fact, in
a sign that Bush père's advisers are on their way
back to power in Washington, the city's foreign policy elites government
officials, lawmakers, pundits, foreign diplomats are now holding
their breath as they wait for the report of Baker's Iraq Study Group
(ISG). The independent, congressionally-mandated panel, which Baker
chairs with “realist” former Rep. Lee Hamilton (D-IN), is set to
issue recommendations on Iraq that could set the ball rolling for
the United States to cut its losses and start withdrawing troops
from Iraq. To put it bluntly, the same foreign policy types whom
the neocons have traditionally accused of “appeasing” Mideast dictators
and of “selling out” Israel have now been assigned by the Bush administration
and Congress to show the way out of the Middle East mess into which
the country was driven by neoconservative-inspired policies.
And according
to news reports, the ISG is expected to call for rewriting the neoconservative
script of establishing democracy in Iraq and to replace it with
a plan to partition Iraq and/or bring the country under the rule
of a friendly dictator, a user-friendly Saddam Hussein. The so-called
Baker Commission may also recommend that Washington start negotiating
with Iran and Syria to take steps to reenergize the Israeli-Palestinian
peace process. In short, from the perspective of the neocons, Baker
and his gang of “pro-Arab appeasers” are drawing the outline of
the anti-neocon foreign policy script.
Indeed, it
seems that the neoconservatives are now engaged in rearguard battle
to secure their remaining outposts in Washington, which include
many media outlets, think tanks, and front organizations, including
the Weekly
Standard, FoxNews, and the American
Enterprise Institute (AEI). The neocons are also striving to
ensure the allegiance of lawmakers, such as former Rep. Newt
Gingrich (R-GA) and Sen. Joseph
Lieberman (I-CT), as well as media pundits, such as David Brooks
of the New York Times and Ann Applebaum of the Washington
Post.
But unfortunately
for them, with Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice embracing what looks like a Realpolitik-lite foreign policy
on Iran and North Korea, it seems that the neocons' last bureaucratic
bastion in the Bush administration is now the office of Vice President
Dick Cheney,
a stronghold from which neocons like David
Wurmser will probably try to counter the rising power of the
old realists. That task could be challenging, if only because Wurmser
and his colleagues are likely to be required to testify before the
congressional investigative committee that the Democrats are sure
to launch in the coming months.
Though the
neocons and their allies in the media have tried to spin the Democratic
electoral victory as a reaction to the corruption and scandals that
engulfed the Bush administration and the Republican Party, the fact
is that most opinion polls suggest that opposition to the Iraq War
was responsible for the anti-Republican, anti-Bush political backlash.
Such sentiment made it possible for Democratic candidate Jim Webb
(a former Republican and ex-Navy secretary) to advance his anti-war
campaign and win the Senate race in Virginia, a conservative, Republican-leaning
state.
It's not surprising
that in this new political environment, neoconservative pundits
and thinkers are hoping to lead a bureaucratic and ideological counterinsurgency.
As expected, many of them are now defending their support for the
Iraq War by arguing that the plan they had envisioned establishing
a prosperous democracy in Iraq and using it as “model” to remake
and reform the Middle East was great, but those who carried it out the
Bush administration screwed it up. Until recently, neoconservatives
have pointed the finger mainly at Rumsfeld, the military, the CIA,
and other allegedly incompetent and disloyal members of the Bush
administration. But now they seem to be ganging up on Bush himself.
Richard
Perle and Kenneth
Adelman, who were both Pentagon advisers before the war (Adelman
predicted that the invasion of Iraq would be a “cakewalk”), Michael
Rubin, a former senior official in the Pentagon's Office
of Special Plans (and a leading backer of Ahmed
Chalabi), and David
Frum, a former Bush speechwriter (credits include the phrase
“axis of evil”), were among the neoconservatives who blasted the
performance of the Bush administration in Iraq in pre-election interviews
with Vanity Fair 's David Rose. Perle, who was a member of
the Defense Policy Board, blamed “dysfunction” in the Bush administration
for the present quagmire in Iraq. “The decisions did not get made
that should have been. They didn't get made in a timely fashion,
and the differences were argued out endlessly,” Perle told Vanity
Fair, according to published excerpts of the article. “At the
end of the day, you have to hold the president responsible.”
Perle also
told Rose that in retrospect, he would not have backed the U.S.
invasion of Iraq. “I think if I had been Delphic, and had seen where
we are today, and people had said, ‘Should we go into Iraq?', I
think now I probably would have said, ‘No, let's consider other
strategies for dealing with the thing that concerns us most, which
is Saddam supplying weapons of mass destruction to terrorists.'”
This reflects a new neocon attitude, since until recently most neoconservatives
insisted that both Iraq and the United States were “better off”
as a result of Saddam's removal.
And Adelman's
excuse for his incredibly optimistic pre-war assessment? He hugely
overestimated the abilities of the Bush team. “I just presumed that
what I considered to be the most competent national security team
since Truman was indeed going to be competent,” Adelman told Vanity
Fair. “They turned out to be among the most incompetent teams
in the postwar era. Not only did each of them, individually, have
enormous flaws, but together they were deadly, dysfunctional.” About
Rumsfeld, a close personal friend, Adelman remarked: “I'm crushed
by his performance.” Adelman also expressed worry that the “idea
of using our power for moral good in the world,” a tenet of neoconservative
ideology, is not “going to sell” after Iraq.
Rubin and Frum
also blast Bush on Iraq, suggesting that he had betrayed neoconservative
principles. Bush's actions in Iraq were “not much different from
what his father did on February 15, 1991, when he called the Iraqi
people to rise up and then had second thoughts and didn't do anything
once they did,” Rubin told Vanity Fair. Frum, who predicts
now that the insurgents will win in Iraq, contends that the blame
for the mess in Iraq lies with the “failure at the center,” starting
with Bush. (For more, see David Rose, “Neo
Culpa,” VanityFair.com, November 3, 2006.)
So how will
the neoconservatives adjust to the new reality in which the foreign
policy realists, backed by Democrats and Republicans, want to project
U.S. power in the pragmatic work of diplomacy? Several former neoconservatives
such as Francis
Fukuyama have already abandoned the neocon ship, bailing on
the movement altogether and perhaps hoping to join the ranks of
Democratic and Republican “realist internationalists” in post-Bush
era.
Of course,
there is at least one neocon who is still bullish about his ideology.
AEI scholar Joshua
Muravchik, writing in the latest issue of Foreign Policy,
exhorts his “fellow neoconservatives” to learn from and admit their
mistakes. “The essential tenets of neoconservatism belief that world
peace is indivisible, that ideas are powerful, that freedom and
democracy are universally valid, and that evil exists and must be
confronted are as valid today as when we first began,” Muravchik
writes. Mistakes were made in Iraq, but mostly by those implementing
the policies. “Could things have unfolded differently had our occupation
force been large enough to provide security?” he asks, seeming to
assign blame for the mismanagement of the occupation on Rumsfeld
and the military. You see, Muravchik implies, the mess in Iraq is
not neocons' fault. Sure, the ideas might have come from neocons,
but after all, “Our forte is political ideas” not practical matters.
Neocons, it seems, are not to be blamed for the poor job done carrying
out their ideas.
What Muravchik
seems to suggest is that the new generation of neocons should be
in charge of a huge project to promote democracy in the Middle East
and worldwide. “The Bush administration deserves criticism for its
failure to repair America's public diplomacy apparatus,” he writes.
“No group other than neocons is likely to figure out how to do that.
We are, after all, a movement whose raison d'être was
combating anti-Americanism in the United States. Who better, then,
to combat it abroad?”
And Muravchik,
a former socialist and labor union activist, reached to the Cold
War-era for an appropriate model for the neocons. “Today, no one
in the U.S. Foreign Service is trained for this mission,” he writes
in Foreign Policy. “The best model for such a program are
the ‘Lovestonites' of the 1940s and 50s, who, often employed as
attachés in U.S. embassies, waged ideological warfare against
communism in Europe and Russia. They learned their political skills
back in the United States fighting commies in the labor unions.
There is no way to reproduce the ideological mother's milk on which
Jay Lovestone nourished his acolytes, but we need to invent a synthetic
formula. Some Foreign Service officers should be offered specialized
training in the war of ideas, and a bunch of us neocons ought to
volunteer to help teach it. There should be at least one graduate
assigned to every major U.S. overseas post.” (For more, see “Operation
Comeback,” Foreign Policy, November/December 2006.)
Muravchik
has also one or two short- and mid-term “practical ideas” for the
neoconservative strategy, including preparing to bomb Iran and recruiting
Lieberman to run for president in 2008. But it's doubtful that his
somewhat kooky program for the neocons training Foreign Service
officers to export democracy is going to be adopted by the
more ambitious and action-oriented neoconservatives. These neocons
are hoping that, notwithstanding the current bureaucratic and ideological
setbacks, they'll be able to regain policymaking powers, as opposed
to just dispensing propaganda. After all, they have suffered similar
losses in the past, including in clashes with the Bush 41 realists,
and eventually came out as at least temporary winners, living to
advise another president and leading the way to the Iraq War. They
are probably already outlining plans and generating goals for the
next generation of neocons.
Reprinted
courtesy of Right Web.
November
17, 2006
Leon
Hadar [send him mail] is
Washington correspondent for the Business
Times of Singapore and the author of Sandstorm:
Policy Failure in the Middle East (Palgrave Macmillan). Visit
his blog.
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© 2006 Right Web
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