The Snarls of Empire, and a Way Out
by Daniel M. Ryan
by Daniel M. Ryan
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Dinesh D’Souza
has evidently
landed himself in hot water. The resultant heat he’s enduring
is saddening, but not really surprising, as he’s always been one
of the braver neo-conservatives around. Had he matched the profile
of the typical "chicken hawk," he never would have written
Illiberal
Education until long after the PC brouhaha was over. Instead
of it being published in 1991, it would have probably hit the shelves
in 1996 or so.
Presently,
he is finding out that bravery carries risks. He’s even faced criticism
from within his own ranks, which
he has undertaken to rebut courtesy of National Review Online.
His latest book, The
Enemy At Home, has evidently trod on a lot of beliefs, or
preconceptions, about al-Qai’da and the threat of Islamist extremism.
His current
travails do parallel a kind of funk settling over the neo-conservative
movement. They no longer have the "mo." It’s back to the
bookworm slot for them, and away from the recent "General Staffer"
slot that they have become accustomed to. Having stuck their necks
out, they are discovering that exposed necks can be poked at, if
not cut at. It’s only a matter of time before the neo-conservative
spirit fades into the kind of anchor
bias peculiar to nostalgia. The kind that’s good for reunion
bashes, for smiling over old episodes of Alias or another
show of its kin, and for brag stories for the kids.
The combination
of Wilsonism and the "War on Terror" is clearly unraveling.
On the one hand, the current bellicosity towards Iran is dissipating,
because no casus belli ad hoc can be found that’s consistent
with the Bush administration’s earlier justifications for the Afghanistan
and Iraq wars. It is an easily found fact that Iran
is essentially a democracy. (The Assembly of Experts is an elected
body.) The Great Provocateur, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, is the elected
President there; Wilsonism cannot exactly be stretched to cover
"the Iranians didn’t vote the right way." In addition,
the Iranian State has made no provably aggressive moves against
United States forces and shelters no known al-Qai’da bases. President
Ahmadinejad has confined himself to verbal threats against America’s
ally Israel, and hasn’t followed through militarily in the way that
Saddam Hussein did. As far as the potentiality of nuclear weapons
is concerned, recalling that there is already an extant "Islamic
Bomb" in the Middle East should be enough to cool the blood-ardor
amongst normal members of the U.S. citizenry. The country that unveiled
it in 1998 was none
other than Pakistan, a U.S. ally.
Speaking of
Pakistan, that ally of the United States happens to be
the most probable location for the training bases of a newly resurgent
al-Qai’da. As you may expect, the Pakistani State, like all
States, is subject to certain inefficiencies, through no fault of
its officials’ own. They can’t help it if al-Qai’da is holed up
in the badlands somewhere near the Afghani border. They’ve done
their best. Can’t really fault them for it, etc., etc. It would
take a lot of explaining from the U.S. government if it were to
be decided in D.C. that Pakistan’s inefficiencies of government
warranted a U.S. invasion of the place. Especially given the fact
that Pakistan is a U.S. ally.
Better luck
next "mo." The crystalline clarity of a world with an
easily defined and isolable enemy is slowly clouding into the normal
world. Terrorists who are smart enough to kill thousands of U.S.
citizens are also smart enough to locate their bases under the jurisdiction
– but not under the eye – of a State that is allied to the U.S.
government. This geopolitical normality also includes bluffing,
and scoring points on the world stage for getting the other players’
goats. A kind of world fit not for a king, but for the gray flannelites
that habituate in Foggy Bottom, not to mention in non-affiliated
but nevertheless associated bars and alky shops.
Some of the
neo-conservatives seem to be aware of this fade-to-grey. As D’Souza
has disclosed, there is hope that
the liberals will jump on board the war effort. This initiative,
clearly, is the end of ye olde "rope of hope." What can
you say about a group of buckos who have forgotten the plainly obvious
fact, one obvious even to a Canadian with a mere minor in history,
that every time the liberals jump on board the War Party, part of
the liberals’ war effort consists of stomping down on the conservatives?
In modern times, the only period of American history when the
liberal foot didn’t stomp on the conservative face, while liberals
were prosecuting a war, was the time when the hippies were running
rampant. Given Bush’s current approval ratings, and the result
of the latest election, what canny Democrat would agree to such
a compromise unless, or until, the Democratic Party is in the captain’s
chair?
Yep, if those
coalition-hopers get their wish, then the current divorce proceedings
between conservatism and libertarianism will come to an abrupt end.
What will replace it will be the same old fusionism, under different
leadership. The same old Coalition of the
Remnant.
Instead of
helping the liberals to stick the sole-side of the boot in their
face, conservatives have an easier option, even if it involves eating
a little crow: reconsidering isolationism.
According to
the
introduction of The Enemy At Home, al-Qai’da, pre-9/11,
was encouraged by what they considered to be U.S. "weakness"
in the Middle East:
During the
Clinton administration, liberal foreign policy conveyed to Bin
Laden and his co-conspirators a strong impression of American
vacillation, weakness, and even cowardice. When Al Qaeda
attacked and killed a handful of Marines in Mogadishu in 1993,
the Clinton administration withdrew American troops from that
country. When Al Qaeda orchestrated the bombings of
the American embassies in East Africa in 1998 and the attack on
the U.S.S. Cole in 2000, President Clinton responded with a handful
of desultory counterstrikes that did little harm to Al Qaeda.
These American actions, Bin Laden has confessed, emboldened him
to strike directly at America on September 11, 2001.
Given his underlying
assumptions, D’Souza has a point. What, though, if this explanation
is modified to, "Bin Laden and Al Qai’da was encouraged by
the apparent weakness of U.S. troops that were sent to a place where
they had no business being"? This does tend to make for the
kind of hesitancy and ineffectuality that encourages enemies.
If foreign
adventures are put a stop to, then the U.S. military will show none
of that "vacillation, weakness and even cowardice" while
abroad because troops won’t be sent abroad. Instead of clumsily
lurching towards Empire, the U.S. military’s presence will be confined
to defense of the U.S. itself, a task that American citizens have
shown consistent strength and resolve in. Ordinary people understand
very well what "our soil has been attacked, and we need to
clobber the invaders" means, and requires. They don’t need
to be put through a sell job to grasp the implications of that policy.
In addition,
a strict policy of non-intervention will render American cultural
exports geopolitically harmless. The rest of the world can
rest easy, once it’s clear that American cultural norms, whether
they be religious or secular, whether traditionalist or "progressive,"
will not be crammed down their throat through American geopolitical
meddling. Because the rest of the world will interact with American
culture as consumers, rather than as would-be subjects, they will
have the choice of taking it or leaving it. With respect to liberal
secularism, the world’s traditionalist faithful will have the option
of discouraging it through withholding of dollars. As a result,
American culture mavens, including the liberals amongst them, will
get the message that some wares are wanted, while others just aren’t.
Consequently, they’ll have a sense of what is really demanded by
the rest of the world’s consumers.
Wouldn’t it
be a more secure world if a would-be convert to radical Islamism
turns away because it can offer him or her nothing that a simple
boycott couldn’t? Especially if said potential recruit is already
used to the lifestyle of the sovereign consumer?
March
15, 2007
Daniel
M. Ryan [send him mail]
is a Canadian with a past. He's currently wearing out his
thumb with pen and paper.
Copyright
© 2007 LewRockwell.com
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