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From The American Conservative
http://www.amconmag.com/06_16_03/print/buchananprint.html
The salad days of the neoconservatives, which began with the president's
Axis-of-Evil address in January 2002 and lasted until the fall of
Baghdad may be coming to an end. Indeed, it is likely the neoconservatives
will never again enjoy the celebrity and cachet in which they reveled
in their romp to war on Iraq.
While this is, admittedly, a prediction, it rests on reasonable
assumptions. But why should neoconservatism, at the apparent apex
of its influence, be on the edge of eclipse' Answer: the high tide
of neoconservatism may have passed because the high tide of American
empire may have passed. "World War IV," the empire project,
the great cause of the neocons, seems to have been suspended by
the President of the United States.
While we still hear talk of "regime change" in Iran and
North Korea, U.S. forces not tied down in occupation duties by the
anarchy and chaos in Iraq, are returning home.
The first signal that the apogee of American hegemony in the Middle
East has been reached came as US soldiers and marines were completing
their triumphant march into Baghdad. Suddenly, all the bellicosity
toward Syria from neoconservatives and the Pentagon, stopped, apparently
on the orders of the Commander in Chief.
Secretary of State Powell announced he would go to Damascus to
talk with President Assad. US ground forces halted at the Syrian
border. Our carriers began to sail home from the Gulf. All the talk
of Iraqi war criminals hiding out in Syria and Saddam's weapons
of mass destruction being transferred there suddenly ceased. "Mission
Accomplished" read the huge banner on the Abraham Lincoln,
as the president landed on the carrier deck to address the nation.
When Newt Gingrich, before an audience at the American Enterprise
Institute (AEI), launched his tirade against Powell and the Department
of State, accusing them of appeasing Syria, no echo came out of
the Pentagon. Reportedly, Karl Rove gave Newt an earful, and the
president himself was prepared to blast Newt, for he saw the attack
on Powell as an attack on his own policy. A few editorials and columns
praised Newt, but the neocons could sense that they were no longer
in step with the White House. So, too, did every other Kremlinologist
in this city.
Why did Bush order an end to the threats to Syria' The answer is
obvious. He is not prepared to carry them out. With the heavy fighting
over in Afghanistan and Iraq, the American people have had enough
of invasions and occupations for one presidential term. The United
States is now deep into nation building in both countries.
Moreover, Syria is not under any UN sanctions. Its leader did not
try to assassinate the president's father. There is no evidence
Damascus is working on nuclear weapons. Assad has not threatened
us. A war on Syria would have no Security Council endorsement, no
NATO allies, no authorization from Congress. Such a pre-emptive
war would be unconstitutional and be seen abroad as the imperial
war of a rogue superpower. For all the talk of unilateralism and
of our "unipolar moment" President Bush clearly feels
a need for allies, foreign and domestic, before launching such a
war.
Finally, having assumed paternity of 23 million Iraqis, few Americans
are anxious to adopt 17 million Syrians. Damascus is a bridge too
far for Bush and Rove, and with two wars and two victories in two
years, why press their luck. The re-election that the president's
father did not win - and not an empire - appears to be what they
are about.
Therefore, for the foreseeable future, the glory days-of Special
Forces galloping on horseback in the Afghan hills, of Abrams tanks
dashing like Custer's cavalry across the Iraqi desert, of statues
of Saddam toppling into the streets of Baghdad, and presidents landing
on carrier flight decks in fighter-pilot garb -are over, behind
us, gone.
And ahead? Like all empires, once they cease to expand, they go
over onto the defensive. Like the Brits before us, we must now secure,
consolidate, protect, manage, and rule what we have in the tedious
aftermath of our imperial wars. And as we have seen in the terror
attacks in Casablanca and Riyadh, al-Qaeda and its allies, not Tommy
Franks, now decide the time and place of attack in the War on Terror.
With 25 US soldiers dead and counting since Baghdad fell, what
the empire now entails is a steady stream of caskets coming home
from Afghanistan and Iraq and tens of billions of American tax dollars
going the other way to pay the cost of reconstruction of countries
we have defeated and occupied.
Victory has brought unanticipated headaches. Having smashed the
forces that held Iraq together-Saddam's regime, the Ba'ath Party,
the Republican Guard, the army-we must now build new forces to police
the country, hold it together, and protect it from its predatory
neighbors. And there are Islamic and Arab elements in and outside
of Iraq determined that we should fail.
Where Tehran and the mullahs colluded in our smashing of a Taliban
they hated, and of their old enemy Saddam, they no longer welcome
America's massive military presence in their region.
Most important, it appears the president has shifted roles from
war leader to peacemaker. While the neocons are adamant in rejecting
the road map to peace, drafted by the "quartet"- the US,
the EU, the UN, and Russia-as a threat to Israel's survival, Bush
has endorsed it and evidently means to pursue it. The neocons are
already carping at him for pressuring Sharon to "negotiate
with terrorists" and "creating a new terrorist state in
the Middle East." Where White House and neoconservative agendas
coincided precisely in the invasion of Iraq, they are now clearly
in conflict. While it has not happened yet, there is the possibility
that our effort at nation building in Iraq will falter and fail,
that Americans will tire of pouring men and money into the project,
and will demand that the president bring the troops home and turn
Iraq over to the allies, the Arabs, or the UN. As one looks at Afghanistan,
Iraq, and a Middle East where al-Qaeda is avidly seeking soft targets,
it may be that all the good news is behind us and that only bad
news lies ahead.
If we have hit the tar baby in Baghdad, the president may be seeking
to extricate us before we go to the polls 17 months from now. And
should the fruits of victory start to rot, Americans will begin
to ask questions of the principal propagandists for war.
It was, after all, the neocons who sold the country on the notion
that Iraq had a huge arsenal of weapons of mass destruction, that
Iraq was behind 9/11, that Saddam had ties to al-Qaeda, that the
war would be a "cakewalk," that we would be welcomed as
liberators, that victory would bring democratic revolution in the
Middle East. Should the cream go sour, the neocons will face the
charge that they "lied us into war." Moreover, for a movement
that is small in number and utterly dependent on its proximity to
power, the neocons have made major mistakes. They have insulted
too many US allies, boasted too much of their connections and influence,
attracted too much attention to themselves, and antagonized too
many adversaries. In this snake pit of a city, their over- developed
penchant for self-promotion is not necessarily an asset.
By now, all their columnists and house organs-Commentary, National
Review, the New Republic, the Weekly Standard-are known. Their front
groups-AEI, JINSA - have all been identified and bracketed. Their
agents of influence - Perle, Wolfowitz, Feith, Libby, Bolton, Wurmser,
Abrams, et alia - have all been outed. Neoconservatives are now
seen as separate and apart from the Bush loyalists, with loyalties
and an agenda all their own.
If Americans decide they were lied to, that the Iraqi war was not
fought for America's interests, that its propagandists harbored
a hidden agenda-as they decided after World War I and exposure of
the "merchants of death"-they will know exactly whom to
blame and whom to hold accountable.
The weakness of the neocons is that, politically speaking, they
are parasites. They achieve influence only by attaching themselves
to powerful hosts, be it "Scoop" Jackson, Ronald Reagan,
or Rupert Murdoch. When the host dies or retires, they must scramble
to find a new one. Thus, they have blundered in isolating themselves
from and alienating almost every other once-friendly group on the
Right.
Consider the lurid charges laid against all three founding editors
of this magazine and four of our writers-Sam Francis, Bob Novak,
Justin Raimondo, and Eric Margolis - by National Review in its cover
story, "Unpatriotic Conservatives." Of us, NR writes,
They
excuse terror. They espouse
defeatism.
And some of them explicitly yearn for the victory of their nation's
enemies.
Only the boldest of them
acknowledge their wish to see the
United States defeated in the War on Terror. But they are thinking
about defeat, and wishing for it, and they will take pleasure in
it should it happen.
They began by hating the neoconservatives. They came to hate their
party and their president. They have finished by hating their country.
This screed does not come out of the National Review of Kirk, Burnham,
and Meyer we grew up with. It is the language of the radical Left
and Trotskyism, the spawning pools of neoconservatism. And rather
than confirm the neocons as leaders of the Right, such bile betrays
their origins and repels most of the Right. One wonders if the neocons
even know how many are waiting in hopeful anticipation of their
unhorsing and humiliation.
"There is no telling how far a man can go, as long as he is
willing to let someone else get the credit," read a plaque
Ronald Reagan kept in his desk. The neocons' problem is that they
claim more credit than they deserve for Bush's War and have set
themselves up as scapegoats if we lose the peace.
Having enjoyed the prerogative of the courtesan, influence without
accountability, the neocons may find themselves with that worst
of all worlds, responsibility without power.
June 16, 2003 issue
Copyright 2003 The American Conservative
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