National Review’s Plan for Victory in Iraq
by
Paul Craig Roberts
by Paul Craig Roberts
Why
do Americans who talk about freedom and democracy rely on coercion?
The
political left is all for coercion against the rich. Freedom and
democracy mean taking the rich’s money and giving it to those who
have a "right" to it.
For
conservatives, freedom and democracy issue forth from the barrels
of our guns. National Review’s cover (May 3) proclaims: "To
the Death, Crushing the insurgency, saving Iraq." The magazine’s
conservative editors are too serious to see the irony, but polls
show that Americans are appalled at the growing carnage.
An
April 28 CBS/New York Times poll found "just 32%, the
lowest number ever, say Iraq was a threat that required immediate
military action a year ago." A majority of Americans now say
the invasion was a mistake.
I
remember when conservatives complained about people like Hitler
and Stalin, who were good at crushing people. Now conservatives
have the spirit themselves.
In
a series of articles in the May 3 issue, National Review’s
writers show off their new face. Leading off with his plan for gaining
legitimacy in Iraq, John O’Sullivan writes:
"Our
first tasks now must be to crush the rebellions, punish the al-Sadr
types, and disband the militias. Ceasefires must be conducted in
ways that dispel any impression of weakness. If threats are made
like the threat to kill or capture al-Sadr they must
be carried out. In general the U.S. must not only win but also be
seen to win."
All
this bloodshed, however, is insufficient to solve "the underlying
problem," which is, O’Sullivan writes, "that Iraq is too
divided to be a fully sovereign democracy." Solving that problem
will require "several decades" as a US colony, and "during
this long period the most important politician in Iraq will be the
US ambassador."
How
many Iraqis would be left after decades of being killed and crushed?
Not to worry. In the next article, David Pryce-Jones writes: "For
as long as anyone can remember, Iraq has been in the hands of some
thug whose will is the only law." Having rid Iraq of Saddam
Hussein, the secret of success is to retain his methods. In the
hands of our thugs, Iraqis are better off, Pryce-Jones writes, because
we have good intentions for crushing them.
To
achieve our good intentions, however, we have "no choice except
to work through the custom inherent in absolute rule. " What
is this custom? Pryce-Jones’ answer: "Superior and exemplary
force alone can prove that the political and military leadership
of the coalition has confidence in its goals, and the strength to
carry them through."
"Liberals
in the West," complains Pryce-Jones, object to the proper way
of handling our new colonial subjects, because liberals are "ignorant
about the harsh imperatives of absolutism." To help liberals
understand that the harsh imperatives of absolutism lead to freedom
and democracy, Pryce-Jones quotes the great admirer of American
democracy, Alexis de Tocqueville, who advised French officers in
the front line in Algeria in 1841: "Only force and terror,
my dear sirs, work with those [Muslim] fellows."
As
for al-Sadr, writes Pryce-Jones, the US should take its cue from
Stalin: "No man, no problem." We must do no less than
Saddam Hussein, who "would have arrested Moqtada al-Sadr and
shot him, as he shot the ayatollah’s father and other members of
the family." For goodness sake, Pryce-Jones exclaims, we mustn’t
sit around and let "those seeking power" [not us of course]
"believe that victory is theirs for the taking" just because
we don’t exercise the harsh imperatives of absolutism. Don’t Americans
understand that the ends justify the means?
Next,
Michael Rubin assures the faint-hearted that Iraqis want the US
to be forceful like Saddam Hussein and stop acting like wimps. The
Iraqi people don’t want American troops to leave, he claims. Iraqis
are upset with us "because American calls for more UN involvement
or for outright withdrawal do little but project weakness."
Iraqis, Rubin tells us, "watch with disbelief" as we project
weakness instead of acting like men and exercising the harsh imperatives
of absolutism.
Richard
Lowry writes that the US need not worry, because we have "the
Marines who will fight in Fallujah and elsewhere in Iraq."
Unlike weak-kneed politicians, Marines aren’t afflicted with doubts,
because Marines accept "an absolute and unquestioning submission
to authority" and can be relied on to do as they are told.
Lowry
sees the Borg as the conservative future. He romanticizes the training
process, which teaches an 18-year old kid to speak of himself in
the third person and turns him into an automaton whose identity
becomes the unit.
UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan disagrees with National Review’s
plan. He says, "Violent military action by an occupying power
against inhabitants of an occupied country will only make matters
worse." Obviously, Annan doesn’t understand the harsh imperatives
of absolutism, which is why the UN must be kept out of the picture.
The
Bush administration maintains that the only Iraqis who oppose our
occupation are "thugs and criminals." According to a new
USA Today/CNN/Gallup Poll, that is most of Iraq: 71% of Iraqis see
the US as an occupier (81% if Kurds are excluded), not as a liberator,
and the majority want us to leave.
Who
do you believe, gentle reader, National Review’s writers
or the polls?
May
1, 2004
Dr. Roberts [send him mail]
is John M. Olin Fellow at the Institute for Political Economy and
Research Fellow at the Independent Institute. He is a former associate
editor of the Wall
Street Journal and a former assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury.
He is the co-author of The
Tyranny of Good Intentions.
Copyright
© 2004 Creators Syndicate
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