Origins of the Species Neo-Con
by
Roger Morris
by Roger Morris
Tracking
the genealogy of the cabal of neo-conservatives who have so disastrously
dominated foreign policy under George W. Bush, journalists have
followed a political bloodline back to the 1960s, to cold war pamphleteers
like Irving Kristol and Norman Podhoretz, and more respectably
if also more tenuously to the postwar University of Chicago
political theorist Leo Strauss.
As
so often with the neo-cons, however, there is less there than meets
the eye, especially in finding any serious intellectual content
in the rise of men like the former Deputy Defense Secretary and
now World Bank president Paul Wolfowitz or UN Ambassador-designate
John Bolton.
Whatever
their other derivation, the genus also traces to more banal, seedier
origins, curling back through closed-door politics where so much
of U.S. history happens. The neo-con coup d'état after 9/11, the
war on Iraq, the fear and loathing as foreign policy all
that and more started as well nearly seventy years ago in the wooded
curving inlets and gentle fog of the far Northwest.
Nineteen
thirty-eight was the year Henry Martin Jackson, an ambitious 26-year-old
Democrat fresh out of the University of Washington Law School, was
elected prosecuting attorney for Snohomish County along the shore
of Puget Sound north of Seattle. As usual, few outside Washington
state noticed the obscure local vote. But it launched a fateful
political career, and ultimately led to the U.S. invasion and bloody
occupation of Iraq.
Jackson
rose rapidly from the courthouse in his hometown Everett. Making
a name for himself chasing San Juan Island-skirting bootleggers
and lumberjack camp gamblers, he shot on to Congress in 1940. He
served five terms in the House, broken by a stint as a World War
II GI, and by 1952, had gained the Senate, where "Scoop,"
as he was called from his days as a paperboy and cub reporter, became
a national force.
A
middle-of-the-road, pro-labor Democrat on domestic issues and an
early champion of environmental causes, Jackson was chairman for
nearly two decades of the Interior Committee (later Energy and Natural
Resources) and sat on the Government Operations Committee and Joint
Committee on Atomic Energy all major fiefdoms in dispensing
federal money and wielding influence in politics and policy. One
of Capitol Hill's more vigorous legislators, he was a main author
and driving force of the legislation creating the Environmental
Protection Agency, major wilderness preservation and other landmark
acts. With another local prosecutor raised to Senate power, Seattle's
Warren Magnuson, Jackson also saw to it that generous appropriations
and contracts were sluiced to his home state. "Scoop"
especially would be known scathingly in congressional corridors
as the "Senator from Boeing" for being on-call to the
increasingly powerful, increasingly corrupt corporate giant.
But
it was in national security that Jackson's impact was deepest. The
hawks' hawk, he was to the right of many in both parties. Not even
the massive retaliation strategy and roving CIA interventions of
the Eisenhower '50s were tough enough for him. Perched on the mighty
Armed Services Committee as well as his other bases of power, he
went on over the next decade to goad the Kennedy and Johnson administrations,
urging the Vietnam War, fatter military budgets, stronger support
of Israel in the Middle East and a more aggressive foreign policy
in general.
It
was then, 40 years ago, that Jackson began to be linked directly,
if furtively, to some of the uglier and little-known origins of
the war on Iraq. Overseeing the CIA's "black budget" for
covert operations and interventions from a subcommittee of Armed
Services, he was one of a handful of senators who gave a nod to
two U.S.-backed coups in Iraq, one in 1963 and again in 1968. Those
plots brought Saddam Hussein to power amid bloodbaths in which the
CIA, exacting the price for its support, handed Saddam and his Baath
Party cohorts lists of supposed anti-U.S. Iraqis to be killed.
The
result was the systematic murder of several hundred and as many
as several thousand people, in which Saddam himself participated.
Whatever the toll, accounts agree that CIA killing lists comprised
much of Iraq's young educated elite doctors, teachers, technicians,
lawyers and other professionals as well as military officers and
political figures Iraqis who would not be there to oppose
Saddam's growing tyranny over ensuing years or to help rebuild or
govern Iraq, as the United States now hopes to do, after the current
war.
By
1969, Jackson was so prominent in military and national security
affairs, and so at odds on those issues with many in his own party,
that newly elected Republican Richard Nixon thought to name the
Washington Democrat his secretary of defense, though the senator
declined the job.
But
Snohomish County's favorite son coveted the White House himself
and was soon a sharp critic of Nixon's arms control and détente.
Added to his cold warring was even greater zeal for Israel, a certainty
that the United States should endorse the Israelis' own hard line
absorbing the West Bank after its conquest in the 1967 Middle
East War, the long-term subjugation of Palestine and an abiding
hostility to Iraq and other Arab states.
As
Jackson grew nationally prominent, he attracted the inevitable ambitious
staffers and partisans boarding his coattails to advance both their
own hawkish views and themselves. Among them was a recent graduate
of the University of Southern California who was fanatic about amassing
and projecting U.S. power, especially on behalf of Israel, and not
least about his own strategic genius. The young New Yorker named
Richard Perle became Jackson's chief assistant from 1969 to 1980.
I
saw these origins firsthand working in the Senate in the early '70s
after resigning from Henry Kissinger's National Security Council
staff over the invasion of Cambodia. Seen from the inside, Jackson's
Senate heft was considerable. Though a relatively small, unprepossessing
figure as politicians go, he usually did his homework, could be
incisive about important details his colleagues let slip and struck
a shrewd balance between conviction and expedience. Much of his
Capitol Hill power derived from his unique role, which he played
well, as a northern Democrat with solid labor backing and other
party credentials yet whose hard-line international view drew the
support of many Republicans and the most conservative Southerners
on either side of the aisle.
His
belligerence also exerted as it still does, of course
an extortionist pull on Democrats deathly afraid of appearing "weak"
on national defense or in standing up to the Russians or anyone
else. There was no question that "Scoop," albeit very
much a half-educated provincial from the mountains and straits of
the far northwest corner of the continental United States, shrewdly
caught the unease and reflexive combativeness of much of America
in dealing with a planet we knew, and know, so little despite our
power. Still, in the '70s, a more worldly post-Vietnam moderation
and sensibility in the leadership of both parties appeared to have
passed Jackson by, leaving his chauvinism and foreign policy animus
marginal, sometimes looking a bit crazed.
As
for Perle, he was a pear-shaped, slightly fish-eyed man of self-consciously
affected locution, the too-hungry, too-sly and too-toadying aide
familiar in bureaucracies public and private. His views were patently
uninformed, and he wore his conference-room warrior's zealotry no
more gracefully than his expensive blue pinstriped suits. It seemed
obvious that the bellicose policies he and Jackson embodied were
not only wrong for America, but would also usher Israel into the
ruinous isolation I and other admirers of its brave people most
feared. "Scoop" & Co. would remain, I assumed, an
extremist fringe.
How
wrong I was.
Jackson,
of course, never got the White House. With big pro-Israeli money
though stolid style, he lost the presidential nomination in 1976
to Jimmy Carter, who offered a fresh face in the national weariness
in the wake of the Watergate scandal. But when Jackson died seven
years later back in Everett, ending more than four decades on the
national scene, he had spawned a cult following. With the lavishly
financed and much-propagandized neo-conservatives first taking power
under President Reagan, and then at the senior levels under a new
and ignorant George W. Bush, their throwback foreign policy was,
and is, "Scoop" Jackson warmed over the red, white
and blue, bombs-away dawn of an old era.
For
his part, Perle missed a long-coveted chance to make presidential
policy when Jackson stumbled in 1976. But the aide promptly moved
on to the next coattails in classic, if banal, Washington, D.C.,
style. Relentlessly levering the system he learned under Jackson,
he cultivated the media, courted politicians in both parties and
used old allies in the ever more politically potent pro-Israeli
and military-industrial lobbies. By the Reagan '80s, he was an assistant
secretary of defense, veteran of the now-venerated Jackson tradition
of military expansion and a self-promoted strategist for a Republican
president as comfortably as for a Democratic senator.
Whatever
"Scoop" Jackson's mix of political principle and opportunism,
Perle's politics were largely himself. And in time-honored Washington
tradition, on the way up Perle gathered his own disciples among
similarly grasping men Wolfowitz, Under-Secretary of Defense
for Policy Douglas Feith and others who would go on themselves in
the same fashion to become key officials in the current administration,
and who gathered their own coterie from assorted Reagan regime and
Capitol Hill right-wing hacks such as Bolton. Like Perle, who was
appointed in 2001 to chair the Bush Administration's influential
Defense Policy Board, they were all longtime advocates, years before
the Sept. 11 attacks, of pre-emptive American military invasions
in Iraq and elsewhere and of implicit, if not open, support for
the expansionist and repressive policies of their right-wing counterparts
in Israel. Their concerted influence was decisive in going to war
in Iraq.
Grown
wealthy in the revolving door between government and corporate plunder,
Perle drew notoriety briefly in 2003 not only for his intimate ties
to Israel but also for his connections to companies standing to
profit obscenely from the war he'd mongered. When Michigan Congressman
John Conyers Jr. and Senator Carl Levin began to prod Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld about the disreputable dealings, Perle angrily resigned
from the chairmanship of the board, though he continued to sit as
a full-fledged member of the pivotal body. It was a fleeting glimpse
of the cronyism, conflict-of-interest, loyalty-for-sale and general
political-intellectual corruption of the neo-cons in Perle's lineage.
It
was also history's nice irony just the kind of disgrace
young "Scoop" Jackson might once have prosecuted up in
Snohomish County.
September
1, 2005
Roger
Morris [send him mail] was
Senior Staff on the National Security Council under both Presidents
Lyndon Johnson and Richard Nixon, until resigning over the invasion
of Cambodia. Morris is the author of Partners
in Power: the Clintons and Their America and with Sally Denton
The
Money and the Power: the Making of Las Vegas. He is completing
Shadows of the Eagle, a history of US policy and covert interventions
in the Middle East and South Asia over the past half-century, forthcoming
from Alfred Knopf.
This
article originally appeared on the Green
Institute GP360 web site.
Copyright
© 2005 Roger Morris
|