Hyenas
in Washington
by Karen
Kwiatkowski
by Karen Kwiatkowski
"First
they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you,
then you win."
~
Mahatma Gandhi
Conservatives
and liberals alike are critical of neoconservative foreign policy,
a creature crowned with empire envy and war-lust yet starkly naked
of caution, conservatism or respect for sovereignty or human rights.
We stand together in awe at the "creative
destruction" invoked by the American Enterprise Institute’s
Michael Ledeen when no other rationale for the occupation of Iraq
survives.
With
black humor, we call them neo-conmen, neandra-cons, neo-Jacobins
or neo-fascists, searching for a title that matches the philosophy.
We agree that new conservatives they’ve never been. Liberals won’t
claim them either.
It
can be amusing and educational to analyze and criticize the neo-conmen
on their good days. They have names like Max Boot – crisp
with his highbrow contempt for American traditionalism and entertaining
with his Orwellian name. Or Joel Mowbray, David Frum or Jonah Goldberg
whose collective prose once waded through reveals naïve youngsters
trying on maturity like long pants for the first time, and giggling
about it. Not yet at home in the world of adults, but no doubt earnest
hopefuls.
The
older crowd of neoconservatives can be almost as much fun. Or at
least they used to be before they got worried about the upcoming
U.S. election, invasions of Syria and Iran slipping like sand between
manicured fingers and the outrageous treachery of Spaniards.
These days, the experience of watching Charles Krauthammer grouse
on Sunday morning that "the next big war is Iran" – while
even FOX’s Brit Hume looks on in amazement – is surpassed only by
observing the ignominious
Defense Policy Board departure of the grubby Richard Perle in
a last ditch attempt to maximize consulting profits before it’s
too late. George Will, whose
recent column attacked even little old me, has gone so far downhill
as an essayist that one thinks perhaps he should retire and make
way for new blood. Bill Safire seems grumpier than ever, and even
the charm of Grandpa Don Rumsfeld
is getting strained and tense.
Teasing
these advocates of silly yet deadly foreign policies is all in good
fun. We should do so mercilessly, Bush-free-speech-zones notwithstanding.
With all due respect, we might even explain that imperial mass democracy/geo-strategic
global militarism is incompatible with a constitutionally constrained
Republic or traditions of sovereignty and international law.
But
the fun is evaporating. It’s becoming downright painful to watch
the political organs of neo-conservatism in America metastasize.
Seven months from the election, we observe this Frankensteinian
political phenomenon – abstract idealism implemented through stamping
boots, forever – morph into something that is even more outwardly
ugly, transparently self-consuming, and doomed.
What
proof can I offer that a withering away of the neoconservative grip
on policy is coming? Certainly our next President, John F. Kerry,
is already familiar with the neoconservative domestic and foreign
policy playbook, and does not reject it. But there are some promising
signs.
Their
reaction to criticism is broadening in scope and hideousness. Last
summer, neocon contempt for me after my
first mainstream commentary was limited to a
mild attack by bench-warmer and Center for Security Policy head
Frank Gaffney, calling me simply an antiwar activist, likely to
be a closet Democrat and uninformed. Later, after the American
Conservative series, Richard Perle and others took to telling
reporters privately that I was a follower of Lyndon LaRouche. Again,
a mild attack, as unfounded as the charges of uninformed Democratic
peace-activist. More recently, however, following the Salon.com
publicity, I have been named anarchist and dangerous person,
according to the nationally televised discussion on March 10th
between Foundation for the Defense of Democracies President Clifford
May and FOX’s John Gibson. This was followed by a Max
Boot declaration of my flakiness and the recent George Will
intimation that I am anti-Semitic. Will deserved a response of course,
and
he got one.
The
good news is that neoconservative attacks on truth tellers are becoming
so shrill that soon only our dogs will be able to hear them.
Until
that happens, one gains understanding of strange noises by looking
for trends or patterns. Neoconservatives are nothing if not predictable,
and their pattern is to discount, then disparage, and then vilify.
I suspect we are nearing Ghandi’s early winning stages, at least
in the game for 2004.
My
own neoconservative critics have increased in rank, their critiques
in stridency. These two measures of neoconservative hysteria comprise
a working-man’s truth-meter, and it is starting to peg.
Like
bats and mushrooms, neoconservative reaction to light is inverted.
This inversion goes beyond the rejection of common sense with their
advocacy of a U.S. empire of ideas, or the chronic misreading of
the nature of both war and terrorism. Neoconservatives also despise
truth when embodied by their own. It is not clear whether the unpleasant
Mr. Perle left the Defense Policy Board in order to make more money,
or rather was asked to leave due to his inability to sit through
a media interview without losing his cool. However, it is clear
that some
of the more moral and well-liked defense staffers are looking for,
or being pushed towards, the nearest exit.
As
in Plato’s cave, once this country turns away from the shadow and
into the light, there will be no going back. Senior and long-time
public servants in the Bush administration involved in diplomacy,
state finance, intelligence and counter-terrorism – people like
Ambassador
Joe Wilson, Paul
O’Neill, Greg
Thielmann, and Richard
Clarke – have turned away from the shadow and are reporting
what they saw.
At
times like these, nervous neoconservatives, like hungry hyenas,
become irritable, aggressive and cannibalistic. My Mom always said
you should say something nice, and it is true. I bet they were cute
when they were puppies!
March
24, 2004
Karen
Kwiatkowski [send her mail]
is a retired USAF lieutenant colonel, who spent her final four and
a half years in uniform working at the Pentagon. She now lives with
her freedom-loving family in the Shenandoah Valley, and writes a
bi-weekly column on defense issues with a libertarian perspective
for militaryweek.com.
Copyright ©
2004 LewRockwell.com
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