Neo-Conservatism Explained
by
Llewellyn H. Rockwell, Jr.
Commentators
across the spectrum have finally clued in to neo-conservatism as
the intellectual framework of the Bush administration. We are suddenly
faced with long think pieces on the role of political
philosopher Leo Strauss in influencing the architects of the
Iraq war and Bush's governance in general. We are also learning
about the ideological path taken by former college Trotskyites into
the Republican Party of the 1970s. It’s an instructive example of
tenacity and dedication in translating ideas into practice.
Along
with the political victory of the neocons (by victory I mean the
reality that they now control many levers of power) has come shock
and alarm of those who disagree with their policies. Their critics
left and right
regard their use of domestic police powers as contrary to constitutional
guarantees, and their foreign policy as nothing but untrammeled
aggression that violates human rights and makes us ever more vulnerable.
Despite
its political victory, the future of neo-conservatism rests with
the war on Iraq and its aftermath. They brought about this war over
the objections of most of the world, and relied heavily on the crudest
form of chauvinistic sloganeering to sell it to the American people.
Iraq has been destroyed, with most people living amidst appalling
wreckage that neocons apparently failed to anticipate. Their raw
military power unleashed utter chaos, barbarism, and fanaticism
in what was once the most secular and liberal Arab state.
The
neocons had a limitless faith in two tools: bombs for destruction
and dollars for reconstruction. With their appalling ignorance of
the complexity of society, they believed that these two tools were
enough to reconstruct the region, and maybe the whole world. It
was only a matter of political will, so they believed. The bombs
caused the regime to flee, but the dollars have not been able to
put it back together again. As only a slight symbol of the Pyrrhic
victory, the
Saddam dinar is now at its highest value relative to the dollar
since 1996. No WMDs were ever found, and terrorism in the region
is getting worse.
Seeing
this disaster, and sensing that they are losing the propaganda war,
neocons are scrambling to control the spin. This has taken several
forms: 1) defending neocon policies, 2) denying that such a thing
as neo-conservatism exists, 3) admitting that neocons do exist but
claiming that they represent nothing really new and thus pose no
threat, and 4) accusing critics of neo-conservatism of bigotry.
That
these claims cannot be reconciled is hardly surprising: the goal
is to relieve the new pressure, not to sort out confusions. For
years, they've labored in journals and journalism, and their sudden
defensiveness is precisely what one would expect now that they have
seized and exercised power with such awful results. Naturally, the
critics go to great lengths to examine the ins and outs of the neocon
philosophical orientation to discern what disaster we can expect
next.
However,
very little commentary on neo-conservatism deals with the crucial
question to ask of any non-libertarian ideology: to what extent
does it seek to use the welfare-warfare state to achieve its end?
The answer with regard to neo-conservatism is clear in the actions
of the Bush administration:
- it has
increased overall government spending by more than any administration
since LBJ;
- it has
unleashed government spies like never before;
- it has
unleashed a series of wars against foreign countries that posed
no threat whatever to the US, laying waste to their economies
and cultures.
Now,
this is remarkable given that the essence of conservatism in America
is skepticism about political power, though it is true that all
conservatives (a word that only became common parlance in American
politics after the Second World War) have been excessively friendly
to the state.
Yet
conservatism did mean a desire to jettison utopian schemes and to
defer to the tacit wisdom associated with what is. Conservatism
was an unstable ideology, and, in fact, not an ideology at all.
It was a predilection to preserve rather than innovate in matters
of public policy. Generally speaking, conservatism offered valuable
critiques of the left, but had no positive program apart from its
endorsement of Truman's Cold War. In order to ensure support for
the Cold War, conservatives came to terms with Leviathan and systematically
resisted the libertarian implications of their domestic program
in foreign and military affairs.
It
is often forgotten that it was not only American conservatives who
backed anti-communism. Another group of anti-communists of the period
was variously called Scoop Jackson Democrats, Cold War Liberals,
Democratic Socialists or Social Democrats, or simply the anti-Stalinist
Left. They favored big government at home and abroad, and had a
particular distaste for the Reds in Russia because they saw them
as having discredited the great dream of socialist planning (and
killed Trotsky). They were passionately for the Cold War but saw
it as less an ideological struggle than a political one. They favored
New Deal-style planning but rejected the excesses of Soviet-style
totalism.
Of
them, Mises wrote:
What
these people who call themselves 'anticommunist liberals'…are
aiming at is communism without those inherent and necessary features
of communism which are still unpalatable to Americans. They make
an illusory distinction between communism and socialism…. They
think that they have proved their case by employing such aliases
for socialism as planning or the welfare state…. What these self-styled
'anticommunist liberals' are fighting against is not communism
as such, but a communist system in which they themselves are not
at the helm. What they are aiming at is a socialist…system in
which they themselves or their most intimate friends hold the
reins of government. It would perhaps be too much to say that
they are burning with a desire to liquidate other people. They
simply do not wish to be liquidated. In a socialist commonwealth,
only the supreme autocrat and his abettors have this assurance.
He
continues:
An
'anti-something' movement displays a purely negative attitude.
It has no chance whatever to succeed. Its passionate diatribes
virtually advertise the program that they attack. People must
fight for something that they want to achieve, not simply reject
an evil, however bad it may be. They must, without any reservations,
endorse the program of the market economy.
After
Vietnam, the Democratic Party became home to an ever-more influential
group of Cold War skeptics, so many leftist Cold Warriors gravitated
to the Republican Party, where they sought to cement the GOP's attachment
to welfare and especially warfare. As Max Boot admits: "It is not
really domestic policy that defines neo-conservatism. This was a
movement founded on foreign policy, and it is still here that neo-conservatism
carries the greatest meaning, even if its original raison d'être
– opposition to communism – has disappeared."
Now,
it would be wrong to say that the neoconservatives had not undergone
any kind of intellectual change. They became less enamored of formal
socialism and more at home with mixed-economy capitalism. They grew
to hate much of the egalitarian-left cultural agenda of Democratic
Party special-interest groups. Many of them wrote treatises decrying
the excesses of their ex-brethren.
But
the transformation was never complete, and the core of their ideology
never changed: these people had then and have now a remarkable faith
in the uses of state power, at home and abroad. Their intellectual
formation in Straussianism convinced them of the centrality of the
elite management of society by philosophers, and their background
in Trotskyite organizing kept a ruthless political strategy as the
operating mode.
As
David Gordon
sums up Rothbard's early analysis: "As Strauss sees matters, classical
and Christian natural law did not impose strict and absolute limits
on state power; instead, all is left to the prudential judgment
of the wise statesman." The younger generation absorbed this tendency
as much as the old.
Thus
with neoconservatism, we have the statist aspects of the old conservatism
minus the libertarian aspects that led the old conservatives to
favor decentralist political institutions and free enterprise. Add
to that the natural tendency of anyone in power to use the tools
they have at their disposal. What we end up with is a danger to
liberty as fierce as any ever posed by the left.
But
by the standard of loving Leviathan, today's neo-conservatism is
worse than every brand of conservatism that preceded it. It is worse
than Reaganism, which included some libertarian impulses, and worse
than National-Review-style conservatism from the 1960s and
1950s. One expects pro-state affections from socialists, but the
puzzle of neo-conservatism is how it could exist within a group
of self-professed non-socialists who even claim to despise what
the collectivist left has done to the world.
Thus
the great fallacy of neo-conservatism is the one that afflicts all
non-libertarian ideologies: they believe that society can be managed
by the state in both its political and economic life. They believe
this to a lesser extent than some left socialists, but to a far
greater extent than most thinkers on the right.
What
they miss or do not want to face is precisely what the socialists
never wanted to accept: that society is made up of acting, choosing
human beings with their own values and ideas and plans, and it is
they and not the state who do the hard work of creating civilization,
a creation that is easy to destroy through statist means but impossible
to rebuild through such means; that many social forces like culture
and economics are beyond the final control of state power; and in
the long run, it is people, and not philosopher kings whispering
in the ears of gullible statesmen, who will determine the course
of history.
May
20, 2003
Llewellyn
H. Rockwell, Jr. [send him
mail] is president of the Ludwig
von Mises Institute in Auburn, Alabama, and editor of LewRockwell.com.
Copyright
© 2003 LewRockwell.com
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