Posted on 08/13/2002 6:51:09 AM PDT by rdb3
As war with Iraq becomes an inescapable reality, a "peace-loving" contingent of pundits have momentarily transferred their assault from the phantom Religious Right to a new, more sinister group, calling themselves neoconservatives.
Forget 50 years of neoconservative political, social and economic thought; forget Irving Kristol, Norman Podhoretz and Nathan Glazer; forget Ronald Reagan whose neocon-influenced foreign policy won the Cold War. From now on, just think of them as warmongers. Stereotyping can be a complicated business, but anti-war pundits have mastered its intricacies, distilling intellectual movements into trouble-free critique: neoconservatives are duplicitous right wingers, prodding the United States towards war to a.) advance our colonial gains b.) facilitate the racist Israeli governments subjugation of defenseless Arabs and c.) wag the dog for oil fetishists George Bush and Richard Cheney.
Joseph Sobran has described neocons as "former liberals, mostly pro-Israel and anti-Communist Jewish intellectuals." Irving Kristol, the "godfather" of neoconservatism, more appropriately described one as "a liberal who has been mugged by reality." But these days, it seems that even temperate support for military action against dictators and terrorists qualifies you a neocon.
Chris Matthews, of MSNBCs "Hardball", a former White House aide and speechwriter for the foreign policy-challenged President Jimmy Carter, spearheaded the recent attack from his San Francisco Chronicle column, writing that a "regime change" in Iraq was "demanded by neoconservative policy wonks and backed by oil-patchers George W. Bush and Dick Cheney."
"What I fear is the neoconservatives," Matthews told an audience at Brown University. "They want to fight the North Koreans again. Iran. Iraq. Syria. Libya." Before long, "theyll go after China." Matthews, who forgot to mention Saudi Arabia, Sudan and France, exposes what sounds like a Jewish conspiracy, facilitated by Republican oilmen. The TV host conveniently failed to mention that every poll shows that a majority of Americans support military action against Iraq.
Matthews, by the way, is not shy about outing the main culprits: Bill Kristol (Weekly Standard), Robert Kagan (Washington Post), "neo-conservative" Frank Gaffney Jr., William Safire (New York Times), David Frum, (a "neo-conservative Canadian"), Joseph Shattan ("a like-minded ideologue"), Paul Wolfowitz ("leads the neo-conservative forces at the Pentagon") and Richard Perle ("neo-conservative high priest") are the main culprits in the scheme.
Progressive pundit Joshua Micah Marshall furthers the neocon conspiracy theory. Marshall, whose remarkable ability to sinuously avoid facts while clearing up why the rights successful track record in foreign policy has more to do with luck than intelligence, wrote an informative article in the June issue of Washington Monthly called "Bomb Saddam? How the obsession of a few neocon hawks became the central goal of U.S. foreign policy."
A FOX News national poll conducted in May, when we assume Marshall was writing his piece, showed that over 70 percent of Americans supported U.S. military action to remove Saddam Hussein. Did a mere handful of neocon hawks a redundant phrase, no doubt organized by Richard Perle persuade mainstream America, as well as the administration, that Husseins regime poses a threat to the Middle East, to the world and thus, to us?
The neocon-obsessed Marshall refers to Perle as the "the portly, Ronald Reagan-era assistant secretary of defense who kept the defense-hawk home fires burning throughout the Bill Clinton years from a perch at the American Enterprise Institute." Clinton might have taken some of his advice, perhaps none of this bellicosity would be necessary. Nevertheless, the slim Marshall points out, in case you missed it or cared, that Perle is "Jewish, passionately pro-Israel and pro-Likud." The importance of those traits can be easily deduced.
The Washington Post's Dana Milbank, author of the Bush-bashing book Smashmouth, called Perle the "intellectual guru of the hard-line neoconservative movement in foreign policy." (America fruitlessly awaits Milbanks piece on the "hard-line progressive movement.") When writing about the Bush appointment of Joseph Shattan, who vigorously opposed the Presidents stand on a future Palestinian state, as speechwriter, Milbank wondered aloud how the neocon had ever gotten the job in this Republican administration. "How did it happen? Sounds like the work of the Kristol cabal, a vast, neoconservative conspiracy centered on William Kristol, publisher of the Weekly Standard magazine." (For the record, according to their web site, the Weekly Standards evil reaches only 60,000 brainwashed neocons a week, while Milbanks Washington Post sells 786,032 daily.)
Also chiming in, early and often, about the neoconservative threat was Lenora Fulanis former presidential running mate Patrick Buchanan. The crabby isolationist also blames neocons and Jews: "The war (Benjamin) Netanyahu and the neocons want, with the United States and Israel fighting all of the radical Islamic states, is the war bin Laden wants, the war his murderers hoped to ignite when they sent those airliners into the World Trade Center and the Pentagon." In another column, Buchanan repeats these attacks almost verbatim, inserting Israels latest prime minister for Netanyahu, writing that Bush is a slave to "(Ariel) Sharon and the neoconservative War Party." Israel has never once asked a single US soldier to die for her. Our enemies, and Buchanans friends, the Saudis, had no problem soliciting lives when Hussein last mobilized against his neighbors.
Khidir Hamza, neither a Jew nor a neocon, but once head of Iraq's nuclear-weapons development, recently stated, "what we are talking about here really is a preemptive strike for a possible future danger which is much larger than we have right now." Hamza testified that credible German intelligence indicates Iraq already has enough uranium for three nuclear weapons by 2005. The CIA believes Hussein possess 2,650 gallons of anthrax. This is surely not enough evidence for the suicidal, pacifist faction. The anti-war crowd needs a casus belli, a picture of Mohammad Atta and Saddam Hussein toasting champagne in front of the Twin Towers floor plan. Anything less would be inconclusive evidence.
A Senate resolution passed Sept. 14 authorizes the president "to use all necessary and appropriate force against those nations, organizations, or persons he determines planned, authorized, committed, or aided" in the attack on 9-11. Recently, Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld told a news conference that Iraq had "a relationship" with Al Qaeda, and Americans have no reason to doubt him. Husseins actions have proven that if not stopped, he will use chemical, biological and nuclear warfare to push the Middle East into a ghastly war. A majority of Americans believe action is a must against Hussein, not because theyve been tricked by crafty necons, but because they have a lot more common sense than the elitist pundits give them credit for.
That will make them think twice.
When you pay up I want you to wear that propellor thingy.
I'm too young to remember The Gipper's radio show, however, you are both right AND wrong about the Chicago economics school. You're right that they weren't "neos," but you're DEAD WRONG about them being paleos. They were libertarians.
Economics is the one area where I agree with libertarians. But claiming this as evidence of "paleo" help is out-and-out lie.
Why don't you ask for evidence backing my claim that most of the GOP's newfound Neocon buddies are just fair-weather Republicans that wouldn't take a turn out of power after the attempt at stealing the 2000 election for Gore failed.
This is pure hearsay on your part. Am I just to take your word for it? Were you there interviewing each Pub and asking them if they were "paleos" or "neos?" If you were not and did not, you can't make this claim. Fact is, you don't know. Neither do I since I was not there, either, and didn't conduct any interviews. If you think I'm going to accept your speculation at face value, you're mentally disturbed.
Could it be that you'd rather not see the evidence that the Neocons support was NOWHERE to be found before Bush was declared the winner and in office?
Asked and answered. You don't have any evidence. You don't even have anecdotal evidence. All you have is your own skewed mental vision as to what a conservative is and/or is not. Also, you're using Leftist speak. The networks may have "declared" Dubya winner, but the fact is he won fair and square.
How many Neocons didja see out on the FL street waving Sore-Loserman signs at Fox News and CNN and MSNBC??? None. Fair-weather RINOs, these soggy scurvy 'RATS be...Yar! (/Sea Capt.)
Your mentioning of a Matrix is incriminating. Your Matrix is your mind.
You just made a fool of yourself by entering into evidence things which are not evidence. Hearsay is objectionable, not reliable.
Lastly, you can refer to me as a neocon. Fine. I like to think of myself more as a post-conservative, but that's another story. But since Reagan went from left-to-right in his political philosophy, he, too, can be accurately called a "neocon." You can't even claim him as yours, but I can since I went through a very similar "pilgrimmage" from left-to-right, as well.
I may be labeled a "neocon," but at least I can't be referred to as a "neo-Nazi" (hint-hint).
How many Neocons didja see out on the FL street waving Sore-Loserman signs at Fox News and CNN and MSNBC???
Define neo-Con. If it means Jewish Republican, well I was at the Federal Building in LA with my Sore-Loserman sign, supporting Bush. :)
It always comes down to that with your sort. Charges of dual loyalty. Watch out for those Mossad agents under your bed. ;)
Knock it off, and learn to spell.
LOL. I missed that. And let me use this post to correct myself. Irving Kristol did not work for Nixon as far as I know. I was thinking of Ben Stein's father. :) But Kristol did just win the MOF.
From post #48:
D&P: Also the Chicago school of economics played a huge role. They ain't no Neocons, Baby!rdb3: ...you are both right AND wrong about the Chicago economics school. You're right that they weren't "neos," but you're DEAD WRONG about them being paleos. They were libertarians.
You say the author is lying, but I caught you red-handed in a lie.
Score: rdb3 -- 7 D&P -- 0.
From post #48:
D&P: Why don't you ask for evidence backing my claim that most of the GOP's newfound Neocon buddies are just fair-weather Republicans that wouldn't take a turn out of power after the attempt at stealing the 2000 election for Gore failed.rdb3: This is pure hearsay on your part. Am I just to take your word for it? Were you there interviewing each Pub and asking them if they were "paleos" or "neos?" If you were not and did not, you can't make this claim.
No refutation to the evidence of hearsay being thrown out of court.
Score: rdb3 -- 14 D&P -- 0
Returning to the Chicago economic model. Nixon contained the U.S.S.R. Ford contained them as well. This policy dated back to Ike's Presidency.
Now, The Gipper shifted gears. He forced the U.S.S.R. to implode through the differences between our economic systems. The Soviets could not keep up with us in the arms race and lost. Was this a "paleo" move? Ike didn't do it. Nixon and Ford didn't do it. But Reagan did. Looking at your statement as to how the Chicago economic school model played a part, AND being shown unequivocally that it was NOT a "paleo" mindset that formed this economic school, your own "paleo-ness" just collapsed onto itself like Russia's did. Reagan's "neocon-influenced foreign policy" did win the Cold War. If it were left to the "paleos," we'd still be engaged in the Cold War nad the "paleos" would be looking for commies behind every tree.
Score: rdb3 -- 21 D&P -- 0
The ONLY point of this article is to demonize conservatives who dare raise objections to the agenda of the Neocons. It paints quite a pathological model of anti-neos with the broad brush of name-calling them peacenik hippies and Buchananite anti-semite conspiracy nuts.
Oh, like this from your new FR homepage, D&P?
FINAL SCORE: rdb3 -- 28 D&P -- 0
Maybe not. Whether it's war with Iraq, overturning the Saudis, or inevitable conflict with China, neo-cons have been promoting foreign adventures for years. The Boy Who Cried Wolf or Chicken Little may sometimes be right, but frequent alarms have made others doubt the alarmists. There's something exaggerated and overheated about neo-con enthusiasms that turns others off. If the military finds this venture necessary and desirable it deserves consideration, but discounting ideologues, lobbyists and opportunists is only common sense.
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