For U.S. Hawks, Madrid 2004 = Munich 1938
by
Jim Lobe
For
neo-conservative and other right-wing US hawks, Madrid has suddenly
become Munich in 1938 and Spain's Prime Minister-elect Jose Luis
Rodriguez Zapatero is former British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain.
In
an extraordinarily unanimous campaign, newspaper columnists and
television commentators are flooding the media with cries of "appeasement,"
the dreaded epithet with which Chamberlain was permanently tagged
after his meeting in Munich with Adolf Hitler, which permitted the
Nazis to slice off a major chunk of Czechoslovakia.
In
the hawks' view, the electoral defeat of Prime Minister Jose Maria
Aznar's People's Party in the wake of last Thursday's bombings,
followed by Zapatero's pledge to withdraw Spanish troops from Iraq
by Jul. 1, marks a collapse of will by a key US ally in President
George W. Bush's "war on terrorism" that will only encourage
Islamist extremists.
"Neville
Chamberlain, en Español" was the title of the featured column
by Ramon Perez-Maura of Madrid's ABC newspaper on the neo-conservative
editorial page of Wednesday's Wall Street Journal, while
the New York Times' David Brooks asked in his biweekly column
Tuesday, "What
is the Spanish word for appeasement?"
Tony
Blankley, editorial page editor for The Washington Times,
was quick to put a name to what he called Zapatero's "policy
of appeasement" "The
Spanish Disease" while the increasingly neo-conservative
editorial writers at the Washington Post worried that the
Socialist leader's "rash" response to the bombings will
mark the beginning of a domino effect throughout Europe.
"The
danger is that Europe's reaction to a war that has now reached its
soil," the Post said, "will be retreat and appeasement
rather than strengthened resolve," a
point echoed by Edward Luttwak, a longtime fixture of the national-security
commentariat who wrote in the New York Times, "the Zapateros
of Europe ... seem bent on validating the crudest caricatures of
'old European' cowardly decadence."
The
image was starkly drawn as well by Robert Kagan, the neo-conservative
who coined the phrase "Americans are from Mars, and Europeans
are from Venus."
Warning
that the bombings and the election results in Spain "have
brought the United States and Europe to the edge of the abyss,"
the cofounder of the Project for the New American Century (PNAC),
whose alumni include the most powerful hawks in the Bush administration,
poured scorn on European
Commission President Romano Prodi's comment after the attacks
that, "It is clear that using force is not the answer to resolving
the conflict with terrorists."
"Are
Europeans prepared to grant all of al-Qaeda's conditions in exchange
for a promise of security?" asked Kagan. "Thoughts of
Munich and 1938 come to mind."
While
some of these commentators conceded that Aznar might himself bear
some responsibility for the sudden turn of events notably
by trying to blame the Basque group ETA even while evidence that
the perpetrators were radical Islamists was becoming overwhelming
the basic thrust of all their comments was that, by supporting
Zapatero, the Spanish electorate had lost its will to confront the
larger terrorist threat, just as Chamberlain had done in handing
over the Sudetenland.
This
interpretation of the Spanish electorate's choice and of Zapatero
himself obviously ignored a number of factors, among them the fact
that the Socialist leader said explicitly from the moment of his
victory that he was committed to the fight against terrorism.
"My
most immediate priority is to fight all forms of terrorism,"
he said. "And my first initiative, tomorrow, will be to seek
a union of political forces to join us together in fighting it."
That
right-wing commentators here generally ignored that vow, or refused
to take it seriously, helps illustrate their view which they
have been hawking since Sept. 11 with great success among the US
public that Iraq is part of the larger war on terrorism,
as opposed to there being two different conflicts.
In
the hawks' view, opting out of one war means opting out of both
a notion that accords very well with their "you're either
with us or you're against us" political philosophy.
But
the Spanish electorate, like much of the rest of the world, clearly
did not see it that way. "In this country, Iraq and terrorism
are indelibly linked in the public mind," according to Charles
Kupchan, a foreign-policy specialist at the Council on Foreign Relations.
"In Europe, they are almost indelibly separated."
"Indeed,
there's a general sense in Europe that the war in Iraq has certainly
not advanced the struggle against terror and probably degraded it,"
he added, noting Tuesday's release by the Pew Global Attitudes Project
of surveys in eight European and Arab countries that showed strong
majorities who concur in that assessment.
Juan
Cole, a Middle East specialist at the University of Michigan, asserted
that, by mixing Iraq with al-Qaeda, the neo-conservatives
in particular had made a strategic error in the war against
terrorism, which was now coming home to roost.
"Aznar,
in supporting Bush on the war against Iraq, was not standing up
to al-Qaeda," Cole wrote, noting that the former prime minister's
decision to deploy troops and spend financial and intelligence resources
in Iraq meant those same assets could not be used against al-Qaeda,
even when it was clear from last May's attack on a Spanish cultural
center in Casablanca that Islamist terrorists had Spain in their
sights.
"How
much did Spain spend to go after the culprits in Casablanca?"
asked Cole? "How much did Bush dedicate to that effort? How
much did they instead invest in military efforts in Iraq?"
In
that respect, Zapatero's pledge to refocus the war against al-Qaeda
can hardly be called a "victory for (Osama) bin Laden,"
according to Cole.
But
aside from this rather fundamental disagreement over whether Iraq
is or is not part of the war against terrorism, the eagerness with
which the hawks have taken to comparing the Spanish electorate's
verdict to the 1938 Munich agreement also betrays a basic distrust
of democracy, about which the neo-cons have long been ambivalent.
In
their view, it was liberal democracies that appeased Hitler in the
1930s and so paved the way to World War II and the Nazi Holocaust.
Indeed, the perception that "liberals" failed to fight
for their principles in the 1960s is what first alienated neo-conservatives
from the Democratic Party.
The
neo-cons' perception that Spaniards voted for the Socialists out
of fear of al-Qaeda's wrath confirms to them that democracy, particularly
of the European variety, is weak.
"Now
all European politicians will know that if they side with America
on controversial security threats, and terrorists strike their nation,
they might be blamed by their own voters," wrote Brooks, who
argued that US voters would, in a comparable situation, rally around
their president.
"Does
anyone doubt that Americans and Europeans have different moral and
political cultures?" he added.
But
this contention ignores the growing weight of political opinion
that the main reason for the last-minute swing to the Socialists
was public outrage with the Aznar government's attempts to withhold
and manipulate what it knew about the perpetrators for its own political
advantage, as well as citizens' opposition to the Iraq war.
Such
attitudes were reported by journalists' following the election in
Madrid.
"In
interviews," the New York Times reported, "they
said they (voted for the Socialists) not so much out of fear of
terror as out of anger against a government they saw as increasingly
authoritarian, arrogant and stubborn."
That
lesson might cut a little too close to the bone for the hawks, who
led the drive to war in Iraq.
March
18, 2004
Jim
Lobe is Inter Press Service's correspondent in Washington, DC.
Copyright
© 2004 Inter Press Service
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