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Victor Davis Hanson: Making Sense of Nonsense. Understanding what we’re in.
NRO ^ | January 20, 2006 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 01/20/2006 5:54:51 AM PST by Tolik

It doesn’t always make sense.

The United States is engaged in the most radical and dangerous gambit in the Middle East since the end of the Ottoman Empire. Established powers are not often inclined to tamper with the status quo abroad, and so do not support the weaker and disenfranchised. They usually prefer to prop up whoever ensures order and stability. But after September 11, the old safe way was seen as dangerous, and the new dangerous way as ultimately more safe.

America not merely reversed its own past practice of supporting autocrats who pumped oil and kept Communists out, at least in the Middle East; but in staying on after the removal of Saddam Hussein—so unlike post-Soviet Afghanistan, Lebanon of 1983, or Mogadishu in 1993—it spent billions of dollars and hundreds of lives to give birth to democracy.

On the principle of one-person one-vote, the Untied States has somehow enfranchised the hated Shia and Kurds, without demonizing the Sunnis. And the Sunnis will probably end up with political representation commensurate with their numbers, despite a horrific past association with Saddam Hussein and the blood of American soldiers on their hands.

And the response?

Shiites claim that we are caving in to the terrorist supporters of al Qaeda and the former Hussein regime. Sunnis counter that we are only empowering the surrogates of Iranian crazies. The Iranians show their thanks for our support for their spiritual brethren in Iraq by humiliating European diplomats with promises to wipe out Israel.

In the larger Middle East, the democratic splash in the Iraqi pond is slowly rippling out, as voting proceeds in Egypt and the Gulf, Syria leaves Lebanon, and Moammar Gadhafi and Pakistan’s Dr. Khan cease their nuclear machinations. Hundreds of thousands of protesters hit the streets in Lebanon and Jordan—not to slur the United States, as predicted, for removing Saddam Hussein, but to damn Bashar Assad and al-Zarqawi as terrorist killers. Walid Jumblatt, the Lebanese Druze leader, now calls for Western pressure to root out the Syrian Baathists.

You’d never know all this from the global media or state-run news services in Europe and the Middle East.

We have sent tens of millions of dollars in earthquake relief to Pakistan, even though for over four years it has given de facto sanctuary to the killers responsible for murdering three thousand Americans. In response, the Pakistani Street expects Americans to provide debt relief, send them aid, excuse their support for our enemies—and then goes wild should we ever cross the border to retaliate against al Qaeda terrorists in their midst who are plotting to trump 9/11.

At home, much about Iraq has been turned around in Alice-Through-the-Looking-Glass fashion. Indeed the debate over Iraq has too often descended into Jabberwocky-like gibberish. We were once slandered as hegemonic; but when we didn’t steal anything in Iraq, and instead spent billions in aid, suddenly we were called naive by the now realist Left.

The war was caricatured as all about grabbing oil. Then when the price skyrocketed, we were dubbed foolish for tampering with the fragile petroleum landscape, or with not charging Iraqi price-gouging exporters for our time and services.

Americans tried to remain idealistic on the principle that Iraqis, if freed and helped, could craft a workable democracy, and that such consensual governments would make the volatile Middle East safer, since elected and legitimate governments rarely attack their own kind. In response, the supposedly idealistic Left charged that we were bellicose and imperialistic — as if being on the side of the purple-fingered Iraqi voter was not preferable to being on the side of the terrorist and insurrectionist, who masked his fascism with national rhetoric.

The realist Right was aghast that profits and the balance of power were lost in the equation. The isolationists felt we were either doing Israel’s bidding, wasting lives and money on hopeless tribesmen, or fattening the government to administer a new empire. And all these alternative views were predicated on the 24-hour pulse of the battlefield, to be instantly modified, retracted, or amplified when events suggested dramatic improvement or disheartening setback.

The exasperated public is told that we had too few troops in postwar Iraq, but have too many now. We wanted to be as inconspicuous as possible, so as not injure Arab sensitivities or create perpetual dependency, but we ended up needing an unfortunately high profile just to put down insurrectionists.

Jay Garner was too much the military man; Paul Bremmer too little.

Prewar forecasts warned a worried public that we might lose 3,000-5,000 soldiers just in removing Saddam. Three years later, we have removed him and sponsored a democracy to boot, and at far less than those feared numbers. But we react as if we had faced unexpected numbers of casualties.

Despite the fact that al Qaedists were in Kurdistan, Al Zarqawi was in Saddam’s Baghdad, terrorists like Abu Abas and Abu Nidal were sheltered by Iraqis, and recent archives disclose that hundreds of Iraqi terrorists were annually housed and schooled by the Baathists, we are nevertheless assured that there was no tie between Saddam and terrorists. Those who suggest there were lines of support are caricatured as liars and Bush propagandists.

Apparently, we are asked to believe that the al Qaedists whom Iraqis and Americans kill each day in Iraq largely joined up because we removed Saddam Hussein.

After September 11, many of our experts assured us that it was “not a question of if, but when” we were to be hit again—with the qualifier that the next strike would be far worse, entailing a dirty bomb, or biological or chemical agents.

Yet when we are still free from an assault 52 months later, censors assure that our safety has nothing to do with the Patriot Act, nothing to do with wiretaps, nothing to do with killing thousands of terrorists abroad in Afghanistan and Iraq, and nothing to do with creating democratic Afghan and Iraqi security forces who daily hunt down jihdadists far from America’s shores. And yet, strangely, there is no serious legislation to revoke the Patriot Act, to outlaw listening to calls from potential terrorists, or to cut off funds for operations in Iraq or Afghanistan.

Summarize what the media, the Europeans, the Middle East, and the opposition at home say about Iraq, and the usual narrative is that an initial mistake was made far worse by ideologues, leading to a hopeless situation that only makes the U.S. appear foolish and impotent, while ruining the military, creating a police state at home, and emptying the treasury.

Yet these same critics surely don’t want Saddam Hussein back. They concede that after three successful elections, Iraq just might be the first truly democratic society in the history of the Middle East. And they privately acknowledge that the reputations of Osama bin Laden and Al Zarqawi are on the wane. How was that possible when almost everyone fouled up?

So how do we make sense of what seems so nonsensical? Rather easily—just keep in mind four general talking points about America’s recent role in the world and most things gradually becomes clearer.

Point One (for Americans): My own flawless three-week removal of Saddam Hussein was ruined by your error-prone postwar peace.

Point Two (for Middle Easterners): We are for democracy—unless you Americans help us obtain it.

Point Three (for Europeans): We are privately for and publicly against what you do.

Point Four (for everyone else): When angry at either the United States (or yourself,) just blame the Jews in America, and Israel abroad.

Sometimes in these crazy times, that is all you need to know.

Victor Davis Hanson is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. He is the author, most recently, of A War Like No Other. How the Athenians and Spartans Fought the Peloponnesian War.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: alqaeda; jihad; jihadists; vdh; victordavishanson; wwiv

1 posted on 01/20/2006 5:54:54 AM PST by Tolik
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To: neverdem; Lando Lincoln; quidnunc; .cnI redruM; yonif; SJackson; dennisw; monkeyshine; Alouette; ...


    Victor Davis Hanson Ping ! 

       Let me know if you want in or out.

Links: FR Index of his articles:  http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=victordavishanson 
His website: http://victorhanson.com/     NRO archive: http://www.nationalreview.com/hanson/hanson-archive.asp

2 posted on 01/20/2006 5:55:44 AM PST by Tolik
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To: Tolik

Another splendid take by this terrific historian.


3 posted on 01/20/2006 6:06:45 AM PST by Syberyenta
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To: Tolik

Man I like this guy. Then again, I agree with his take on things!


4 posted on 01/20/2006 6:07:26 AM PST by refermech
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To: Tolik

great


5 posted on 01/20/2006 6:08:33 AM PST by samtheman
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To: Tolik

Nail-Hit-Head!


6 posted on 01/20/2006 6:14:37 AM PST by gumboyaya
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To: Tolik

And the main reason for most of this literal non-sense is because we are dealing with islam ... the original through the looking glass culture.

So we gotta do what's best for us and western civilization because islam is not going to react in any logical way, i.e., with gratitude etc. because to them we are infidels - end of story.


7 posted on 01/20/2006 6:31:39 AM PST by Let's Roll ( "Congressmen who ... undermine the military ... should be arrested, exiled or hanged" - A. Lincoln)
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To: Tolik

Interesting that VDH should use the end of the Ottoman Empire as a starting point. He is right of course, but he did not explain why. In 1924 Turkey's Kemal Ataturk eradicated the Caliphate of Abulmecid Effendi, an instituion that is traced to the beginning of Islam 1,300 years previously. At the heart of the Salafist ideal men like OBLaden, Zawahiri, Shaykh Omar, etc., are determined to return Islam to an earlier time in its history following the death of Muhammad, and in doing so restore the idealized Caliphate and the dominance of the Umma (the community of Muslim believers) and the sharia (Muslim law). It is an idealized past, and a theocratic-totalitarian present that drive the terrorists, but drive them it does.


8 posted on 01/20/2006 6:33:09 AM PST by gaspar
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To: Tolik

Help! I need some Cliff Notes for the final Four Points.

Who is VDH channeling?


9 posted on 01/20/2006 6:57:18 AM PST by maica (We are fighting the War for the Free World. Democrats and the media are not on our side.)
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To: gaspar
Let UBL & his PR firm, al Jazeera be advised that one more 9/11 type terrorist attack in America and every swinging Mohammad in America will have to pack up their Koran & family and go back to whatever hellhole they originated from.

Our ancestors didn't risk life and limb to come to this country to make a better life for themselves just so a bunch of camel jockeys could come here and terrorize our women and children and make hamburger out of our families.
10 posted on 01/20/2006 7:07:07 AM PST by kellynla (Freedom of speech makes it easier to spot the idiots. Semper Fi!)
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To: Tolik
But after September 11, the old safe way was seen as dangerous, and the new dangerous way as ultimately more safe.

Pity our "realist" and neo-isolationists refuse to recognize this fundamental fact of post 9-11 life.

11 posted on 01/20/2006 7:11:42 AM PST by MNJohnnie (Is there a satire god who created Al Gore for the sole purpose of making us laugh?)
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To: Tolik
How was that possible when almost everyone fouled up?

Just lucky..?.................................... or maybe because many thousands of Americans have put everything on the line to make it happen.

12 posted on 01/20/2006 7:41:55 AM PST by oldbrowser (No matter how cynical I get, I can't seem to keep up)
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To: Tolik

Thanks. VDH bump!


13 posted on 01/20/2006 12:48:23 PM PST by freeangel ( (free speech is only good until someone else doesn't like what you say))
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To: Tolik

bttt


14 posted on 01/21/2006 5:37:17 AM PST by metesky ("Brethren, leave us go amongst them." Rev. Capt. Samuel Johnston Clayton - Ward Bond- The Searchers)
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