Charles the Hammer
by
Jack Kenny
by Jack Kenny
DIGG THIS
Neoconservative
pundit Charles Krauthammer reminds me of a book review by the late
Dorothy Parker. Commenting an opus of which she obviously disapproved,
Miss Parker opined that it was not a volume to be tossed aside lightly,
"but rather hurled with great force."
Surely, Dr.
Krauthammer is not someone to be taken lightly. In addition to being
a medical doctor, he is a Pulitzer Prizewinning columnist
and a frequent commentator for Fox News and other mass media venues.
Last year, Financial Times named him "America’s most
influential commentator." Alas for America. For Dr. Krauthammer’s
prescriptions for America and much of the rest of the world are
worthy of being "hurled with great force."
Krauthammer
used his considerable influence in 2002 and 2003 to help sell much
of the American public on the war for which the Bush administration
was clearly itching. It began with the president’s talk about "regime
change" in Iraq, a policy adopted in the late 1990’s by the
Clinton administration and the Republican Congress. When that didn’t
win the country over, Iraq’s "weapons of mass destruction"
became the new mantra. The neocon high church choir took up the
theme and was soon singing, chanting and beating the drums for another
war with Iraq. And there was Krauthammer in the midst of them.
In words reminiscent
of the "mushroom-shaped cloud" warning of Condoleezza
Rice, then the president’s adviser on national security, Krauthammer
warned in 2002 that Iraqi ruler Saddam Hussein was in hot pursuit
of a nuclear bomb to go with the chemical and biological weapons
that the Bush administration and its echo chamber in the neocon
press told us with certainty he possessed.
"…[I]f
he comes into possession of nuclear weapons in addition to the
weapons of mass destruction he already has, he is likely to use
them or share them with terrorists," Krauthammer wrote. "The
threat of mass death on a scale never before seen residing in
the hands of an unstable madman is intolerable and must be
preempted."
In March of
’03, the president and his allies in the "coalition of the
willing" launched a war for the ostensible purpose of disarming
the Iraqi dictator. It’s worth recalling, however, that the war
was called not "Operation Iraqi Disarmament," but Operation
Iraqi Freedom. Liberation, via regime change, remained at the heart
of the enterprise. And no member of the Fourth Estate was more wildly
enthusiastic about the prospects for a liberated Iraq than "America’s
most influential commentator." By April of ’03, Krauthammer
was hailing the successful "Three Week War" as a "revolution
in world affairs." Krauthammer is, of course, the kind of "conservative"
who glories in revolution.
"It is
one thing to depose tin-pot dictators." he exulted. "Anyone
can do that. It is another thing to destroy a Stalinist demigod
and his three-decade apparatus of repression and leave the country
standing. From Damascus to Pyongyang, totalitarians everywhere are
watching this war with shock and awe."
"Shock
and awe," mind you. Yes, Krauthammer likes to help the Bush
administration stay "on message." In August of ’03, he
was still bullish on the transformation of Iraq. "With its
oil, its urbanized middle class, its educated population, its essential
modernity, Iraq has a future," he wrote. "Once its political
and industrial infrastructures are reestablished, Iraq’s potential
for rebound, indeed for explosive growth is unlimited." The
use of the word "explosive" in that sentence carries a
certain irony that Krauthammer surely did not intend. In October
of ’04, Krauthammer was still singing the praises of the great American
"revolution" in the Middle East.
"Establishing
civilized, decent, nonbelligerent, pro-Western polities in Afghanistan
and Iraq and ultimately their key neighbors would, like the flipping
of Germany and Japan in the 1940s, change the strategic balance
in the fight against Arab-Islamic radicalism," he wrote. Nowadays,
however, America’s own Charles "the Hammer" seems not
quite so optimistic. All that is hindering the great transformation
of Iraq into the New York or California of the Middle East, he has
discovered, are the Iraqis. Someone, it seemed, forgot to give them
the playbook.
Once out from
under the tyrannical rule of Saddam Hussein, the Iraqis have ostensibly
been given their freedom. They are free to kill one another, which
a good many of them have been doing with reckless abandon. Here
is Krauthammer’s description of the fighting in Iraq in a column
published last week.
"Thousands
of brave Americans have died trying to counter, put down and prevent
civil strife," he noted. "They fight Sunni insurgents
in Fallujah, Ramadi and Baghdad, trying to keep them from sending
yet one more suicide bomber into a crowded Shiite market. They hunt
Shiite death squads in Baghdad to keep them from rounding up random
Sunnis and torturing them to death." In other words, we are
killing Sunnis to keep them from killing Shiites and killing Shiites
to keep them from killing Sunnis. Seems fair. So why can’t they
all just get along?
What bothers
Krauthammer, though, is that some people want to blame this civil
war on America. (Gee, wonder where they ever got that idea.) "We
have made a lot of mistakes in Iraq," he conceded, though he
apparently still does not believe that the first one was going there.
But "to place the blame on the one player, the one country,
the one military that has done more than any other to separate the
combatants and bring conciliation is simply perverse," Krauthammer
declared.
Right. Just
because all our president’s horses and all our president’s men can’t
put Iraq together again, don’t blame the great decider-in-chief
and his minions for pushing the country over the brink to begin
with. Blame the Humpty Dumpties of Iraq. Never mind that there was
no civil war there before the U.S. and coalition forces arrived
to perform regime change. The Iraqis were living under a brutal
dictatorship that somehow did not prepare them for the "cakewalk"
in which they were supposed to welcome Americans as liberators and
shower them with flowers, not fragments from grenades and car bombs.
According to various polls, some 90 percent of the Iraqis now believe
they were better off before we "liberated" them and 60
percent think killing members of the American occupying force is
a good idea. (Ungrateful wretches!)
Blaming the
United States for the civil war in Iraq "overlooks the plainest
of facts," Krauthammer argues. "Iraq is their country. We midwifed
their freedom. They chose civil war." Brilliant! Except for the
plain fact that when the Bush administration launched "Operation
Iraqi Freedom," Krauthammer and other cheerleaders for Bush War
II were gushing over the future of a liberated Iraq that would,
of course, choose a constitutional democracy, and would by now be
living in harmony among themselves and their neighbors, "happy ever-aftering"
in peace and prosperity. Instead, the sinful Iraqis have fallen
into sectarian violence and strife, even civil war. That must have
come as a terrible surprise to the disappointed Dr. Krauthammer.
Because we’ve
never seen that happen before in the Middle East, have we?
February
9, 2007
Manchester, NH, resident Jack Kenny [send
him mail] is a freelance writer.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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