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In Defense of Hitchens
Canon Magazine ^ | 12/2002 | Mark Grueter

Posted on 03/13/2003 10:07:32 PM PST by Face Man II

Siding with Hitchens

by Mark Grueter

It has become fashionable in some circles to oppose a war in Iraq. In between Washington and Union Squares, one frequently hears somebody chanting, “No War On Iraq” or “No Blood For Oil.” For many, any conflict initiated by the United States is an evil, imperialist enterprise embarked upon solely to further the narrow, myopic interests of big business and greedy politicians. Thus, one has the benefit of not having to think when deciding whether or not to support war. These people, pacifists or otherwise, enjoy gathering together at demonstrations, one of which I attended. Ralph Nader, Phil Donahue and others were speaking outside Federal Hall. I like Nader but he tends to attract some of the more zany elements of our society. These events are always a spectacle of sorts. This one boasted, among other absurdities, gigantic, inflated pigs on display that give it a certain Barnum and Bailey flavor. While Mark Green was speaking, a short, fat, unwashed guy with a ZZ top beard kept on screaming, “Mark Green is a phony Green!” Somebody might have told this poor heckler that Mark Green is not a Green anyway; he is a Democrat. Self-righteous dupes, a peculiar minority wing during the Vietnam era, are now the mainstream at protests. One gets the sense that much of the Left has been hijacked by a herd of ungrateful and close-minded pissants, trying so desperately not to conform. On October 30th, in spite of the sideshow, the Graduate Faculty held an engaging forum on Iraq. The three presentations all strongly opposed any conflict initiated by the US or the UN. Many intelligent criticisms of US policy were made, however, there was a conspicuous absence of any dissenting, pro-war or pro-UN resolution views. And the case made against war in Iraq, although compelling, was insufficient, leaving many questions unanswered. GF Professor Andrew Arato insists that there exists “very little” chance of Saddam Hussein using WMDs or of him providing any WMDs to terrorist groups, and that the leader of Iraq is not a threat to the world. I am sympathetic to these contentions, but one must wonder how Professor Arato can be so sure of himself. Ultimately, it is a guessing game, so why should he so adamantly distrust his own government yet be willing to place so much faith and trust in a man that has, for instance, murdered his own brother-in-law and used chemical weapons on his own people? This Arato-logic gives credibility to what GF Professor Christopher Hitchens boldly wrote in his going-away article for The Nation, a publication he contributed to for 20 years: “I have come to realize that the magazine…is becoming the voice and echo chamber of those who truly believe that John Ashcroft is a greater menace than Osama bin Laden.” Professor Arato does not write for The Nation, but the troubling point remains: it seems, for many on the Left, that Bush is more dangerous or sinister than Saddam. Hitchens quit The Nation after twenty excellent years of minority reporting because he was fed up with the lack of debate at the magazine over the Clintons, Kosovo, 9/11, Afghanistan and finally Iraq. (Some of us wish he had stayed there for this very reason. And I suspect the little sheet has lost many readers as a consequence). Hitchens, to the disgust and astonishment of many of his colleagues and former admirers, supports a war to remove Saddam Hussein, just as he supported wars against the Taliban, Al-Qaeda and Slobodan Milosevic. He argues that these are the revolutionary struggles - these are the movements the Left, in all countries, should fight for. We should oppose “Islamo-fascists” and brutal dictators with everything we have got, even if our own governments are far from perfect. Hitchens compares what is happening now with the scene in 1939, when many British leftists opposed war with Germany because of British Imperialism in India. This strange and false reasoning corresponds neatly with the strange and false assertion that one has to be faultless in order to criticize others. Furthermore, allowing Saddam to stay in power is a defense of the status quo, a conservative position. “The fires had not yet gone out at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, a year ago, before the War Party had introduced its revised plans for American empire. What many saw as a tragedy, they saw instantly as an opportunity to achieve US hegemony over an alienated Islamic world.” This was written by the renowned liberal champion Patrick Buchanan, but could have just as easily been uttered by Noam Chomsky or Andrew Arato. Indeed, Hitchens goes so far as to contend that “the most serious opposition to the war comes, at the moment, from the Right. The Left is just making its usual noise. Nobody cares what they say. It is of no further relevance. It has no principle to it. It doesn’t take any risks. It isn’t embarking on anything radical or analytical.” Many on the Right are afraid a war will destabilize their system in the Middle East; antiwar factions on both sides favor the policies of containment and deterrence - the two terms most disparaged by the Left during the Cold War. Hitchens, on the contrary, welcomes the prospect of this war because it is effectively, “dumping the Nixon doctrine. It is dumping the idea we rule through client states like Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, the client states that betrayed us, that shot us in the front on the 11th of September, that incubated Al-Qaeda, that resent their client status.” And this is why those on the Right like Scowcroft and even Kissinger are suspicious of this Iraqi meddling - it is potentially subversive. Hitchens has been communicating and working with opposition groups in Iraq for three decades; he views the issue, in part, as a matter of loyalty to his Iraqi comrades: “When I first became a socialist, the imperative of international solidarity was the essential if not the defining thing, whether the cause was popular or risky or not.” By displacing the Baathists the US government will provide a real opportunity for the Iraqi and Kurdish peoples to liberate themselves. This is true even if it is not what truly motivates Bush’s policy. An unintended result of the first Gulf War was the partial liberation of Kurdistan. In this autonomous enclave in northern Iraq optimism has spread over what appear to be signs of pluralism, freedom and overall development. Lastly, dissident groups in Iraq recognize that the removal of their despot will also mean the end of UN sanctions, which have wreaked havoc on the poor and defenseless since 1992 (the fault of both Saddam and the UN). Oil is an additional reason to wage war, not one to oppose it - unless we would rather continue to have its distribution controlled by Hussein than by a (potentially democratic) government friendly to the international community and the United States. Hitchens makes the additional point that “with Iraqi oil back on stream and anything like an open society there, you don’t have to depend on Saudi Arabians anymore. You can say to the Saudi, your monopoly means nothing to me.” This does not, of course, mean that we shouldn’t be putting more time and money into the development of alternative sources of energy (and to begin employing existing technologies on a large scale). Everybody knows oil is finite. However, it is unwise to shun the practical politics of oil in the meantime, as many on the Left would have it. Most of the same people that oppose a war against Saddam opposed the war in Afghanistan, as well as the war on terrorism in general. And they are making very similar arguments in all cases, which, when simplified amount to something like, ‘a war will do much more harm than any good.’ However, their dire predictions about Afghanistan were shown to be false. The campaign did not create a humanitarian catastrophe, scores of people did not starve to death (6 million was the estimate); millions of refugees did not pour over the border; it did not become a “quagmire.” (Refer to any of the literature coming out of the Left, in September and October 2001 especially, for examples of these claims). Civilian casualties were avoided whenever possible, in part because of the precision technology mastered over years of massive military budgets. Noam Chomsky and his co-thinkers like to cite a former professor of mine, Marc Herold, who calculated that US bombings have killed 3,000 Afghani civilians (“at least”) and counting. Herold derived this figure from a collection of European and Arab newspaper reports. The presumed and often stated objective of this tally is to demonstrate moral equivalence between the 9/11 incident and US retaliation. All other non-Pentagon, usually left-leaning efforts to add up the numbers have yielded much lower results (approximately 1,000 was the highest). And there is an important moral and intellectual distinction between premeditated killing, which is murder, and unintentional killing or killing in self-defense, which is not. The long-term effect of the raid will almost certainly end up saving many more lives (and provide improved lives for millions more) in the long run than those that were taken away. This is grim business for sure, but as long as the “principled” Left refuses to engage in this complex, necessary debate it cannot have an impact on actual policy. In this sense Hitchens is correct - the Left is “irrelevant.” The results of the bombing campaign in Afghanistan were largely encouraging: the war was over quickly, we made significant headway in debilitating Al-Qaeda, Afghanis took to the streets to cheer, music was back on the airwaves in Kabul. By smashing the Taliban, the US obliterated the largest impediment to that country’s progress. It remains to be seen how things will eventually unfold, but we can now at least hope that something resembling an open and just society will emerge. According to Hitchens, Afghanistan was the first country ever to have been “bombed out of the stone age.” “As someone who has done a good deal of marching and public speaking about Vietnam, Chile, South Africa, Palestine and East Timor in his time (and would do it all again), I can only hint at how much I despise a Left that thinks of Osama bin Laden as a slightly misguided anti-imperialist,” writes Hitchens. It is interesting to note that bin Laden, who is allegedly revolting against imperialism, is himself an imperialist. He condemned the UN/Australian rescue of East Timor, a liberation that is almost certainly connected to the recent vengeance bombing in Bali. So, bin Laden is not above supporting everything he is alleged to be reacting against. Indeed, Noam Chomsky’s work for the cause in East Timor is worthy of awe, rendering his robotic comparisons between bin Ladenism and Western depredations all the more disappointing. It seems as though the Chomsky Left of today cannot move beyond the Cold War mentality. This faction of the Left assumes, in part because of America’s brutal war in Indochina, that the US Government, particularly a Republican administration, is incapable of effecting constructive change abroad. But the dynamic has changed over the last decade. As The Nation writer Adam Shatz concedes, “I never saw the Soviets, the Cubans, the Sandinistas or the ANC as enemies. Al-Qaeda is another matter altogether.” And so is Saddam Hussein, I might add. Hitchens bitterly concludes, “Instead of internationalism, we find now among the Left a sort of affectless, neutralist, smirking isolationism,” writes Hitchens. The past does not always predict the future. It is a logical fallacy to conclude (as almost all antiwar advocates do) that because the US government propped up Hussein and bin Laden in the past America has no credibility to oust them now. As Hitchens points out, the fact that the US did support these two awful individuals only increases its responsibility to dispose of them now. And actually, as Americans, it is our responsibility.

Undoubtedly, there are some strong reasons to question a war in Iraq. Hitchens writes a concise summary of causes for concern:

Only a fool would trust the Bush Administration to see all of this. I am appalled that by this late date no proclamation has been issued to the people of Iraq, announcing the aims and principles of the coming intervention. Nor has any indictment of Saddam Hussein for crimes against humanity been readied. Nothing has been done to conciliate Iran, where the mullahs are in decline. The Palestinian plight is being allowed to worsen. These misgivings are obviously not peripheral.

(As I am writing this, an indictment against the sadistic Iraqi leader is finally being drawn up). Hitchens has been one of the most prominent and effective left-wing critics of US foreign policy over the last twenty years; he is well aware of America’s inimical capabilities, and that is why his defection is so significant. Nothing will persuade the antiwar Left (or antiwar Buchanan Right) that a campaign to remove Saddam and free the Iraqi people is justified. There will always be an excuse to oppose it. At first, the complaints were that the US intended to strike Iraq unilaterally, that everybody in Europe, Russia, China and the Arab world was against Bush, and that there existed no evidence of Hussein possessing WMDs. Now that those critiques have been answered and Bush has voluntarily (and shrewdly) gone through the United Nations, graciously agreeing to afford Saddam one last chance with inspections, the argument has changed: by attacking Iraq, we are likely to prod Saddam into using his WMDs (the same ones he never had in the first place) against us or Israel. Hitchens calls this game “subject change.” When every other peace marcher was demanding that Bush provide proof of Hussein possessing WMDs, Hitchens wrote, “It is obvious to me that the “antiwar” side would not be convinced even if all the allegations made against Saddam Hussein were proven, and even if the true views of the Iraqi people could be expressed.” And because of this, there is no incentive for anyone in power (or anyone at all) to take the Left seriously. Another example of this evident implacability: GF Professor Robin Blackburn believes the UN has no credibility because it gives too much power to the five permanent members of the Security Council, and it has become thoroughly corrupted. So he dismisses the new multilateral approach to Iraq, and he is certain we will go to war no matter what because there is a “crisis of capitalist institutions” and the US has to exploit the oil reserves in Iraq in order to save the system. Everything has already been pre-determined. The most cogent Arato/Blackburn/Chomsky critique runs something like this: ‘It does not do any good to talk loosely about a new humane foreign policy of helping to emancipate the downtrodden and targeting oppressive dictators when that is not really what our governors intend to do. Why should we believe Hitchens, who all the sudden claims that the US can truly stand as a beacon of freedom, despite all of the crimes that were committed in the past and are currently being committed? Bush hardly even affects concern for the downtrodden - the declared pretext for targeting Iraq is self-defense.’ (And we can agree that commercial interests are another reason). ‘The motives will always be based on crass self-interest.’ Admittedly, these are not easy questions to resolve. First, we can point to the success of NATO operations in the Balkans during the 1990’s (better late than never) - what vital US interests were at stake there? These were largely humanitarian interventions spearheaded by Tony Blair and the commanders in the field who were horrified by what they saw on the ground. Another sign of US willingness to promote decency is, of course, Afghanistan. The terrible events of September 11 has further altered past geopolitical realities, allowing new opportunities to surface. I contend that it is in the broader interests of the United States to pursue a morall-driven foreign policy, alongside a policy of self-interest/self-defense. At the very least, it is not against our interests, and our strategists are beginning to realize this - the dual failures of containment and ruling through client regimes is now too hard to overlook. And there is a great deal of overlap between these two approaches at the moment. The time is right to synthesize humanitarian interventions with more conventional forms of intervention; the Left can either help forge this process for the better, or play the role of malcontent, sitting on the sidelines of history, smugly feigning superiority to it all. Ultimately, for or against this campaign in Iraq, the Left needs to remain, at the least, open to the idea of military intervention as a potentially constructive and progressive endeavor; it needs to be able to re-examine its positions, to carefully consider each new situation as it arises, instead of always cynically assuming the worst. The Left is becoming more and more alienated from mainstream America and marginalized within the political process (this is scarcely surprising what with Gore Vidal now claiming that Bush knew about the September 11 attacks, could have stopped them easily, but deliberately chose not to). A recent poll found that only 2% of Americans would oppose a Security Council resolution to inspect Iraq first and then authorize a strike on a condition of non-compliance. The message: we need to give George Bush and our allies a chance, just as we are giving Saddam another chance. Even though I obviously trust Christopher Hitchens’s instincts and reasoned arguments over everybody else’s in regards to Iraq, I cannot, just as obviously, know for sure that he is right. I side with Hitchens primarily because, unlike his adversaries, he is challenging the way we on the Left think. He has the ability to turn inwards and re-evaluate old positions and tactics; he understands the connection between open debate, conflict, and progress in all aspects of life. Has Chomsky ever second-guessed himself? As a result of his experiences Hitchens possesses a unique and genuine understanding of the nature of the threat we are faced with. His critical insight and analysis in this post 9/11 era should serve as a wake-up call to those who have been resting on their laurels for far too long. Anyone interested in making the Left “relevant” again would do well to start paying attention.


TOPICS: Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: hitchens; liberalcaseforwar
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To: MHGinTN
Thank you, but I'm no longer coaching. I'm a color commentator on TNT - catch me on thursday nights with John Thompson. I love this site, btw, but only registered this evening.
21 posted on 03/13/2003 10:29:46 PM PST by Face Man II
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 16 | View Replies]

To: dts32041; keri
HEY! BETTER STILL:

Siding with Hitchens by Mark Grueter

It has become fashionable in some circles to oppose a war in Iraq.

In between Washington and Union Squares, one frequently hears somebody chanting, “No War On Iraq” or “No Blood For Oil.”

For many, any conflict initiated by the United States is an evil, imperialist enterprise embarked upon solely to further the narrow, myopic interests of big business and greedy politicians.

Thus, one has the benefit of not having to think when deciding whether or not to support war.

These people, pacifists or otherwise, enjoy gathering together at demonstrations, one of which I attended.

Ralph Nader, Phil Donahue and others were speaking outside Federal Hall.

I like Nader but he tends to attract some of the more zany elements of our society.

These events are always a spectacle of sorts.

This one boasted, among other absurdities, gigantic, inflated pigs on display that give it a certain Barnum and Bailey flavor.

While Mark Green was speaking, a short, fat, unwashed guy with a ZZ top beard kept on screaming, “Mark Green is a phony Green!” Somebody might have told this poor heckler that Mark Green is not a Green anyway; he is a Democrat.

Self-righteous dupes, a peculiar minority wing during the Vietnam era, are now the mainstream at protests.

One gets the sense that much of the Left has been hijacked by a herd of ungrateful and close-minded pissants, trying so desperately not to conform.

On October 30th, in spite of the sideshow, the Graduate Faculty held an engaging forum on Iraq.

The three presentations all strongly opposed any conflict initiated by the US or the UN.

Many intelligent criticisms of US policy were made, however, there was a conspicuous absence of any dissenting, pro-war or pro-UN resolution views.

And the case made against war in Iraq, although compelling, was insufficient, leaving many questions unanswered.

GF Professor Andrew Arato insists that there exists “very little” chance of Saddam Hussein using WMDs or of him providing any WMDs to terrorist groups, and that the leader of Iraq is not a threat to the world.

I am sympathetic to these contentions, but one must wonder how Professor Arato can be so sure of himself.

Ultimately, it is a guessing game, so why should he so adamantly distrust his own government yet be willing to place so much faith and trust in a man that has, for instance, murdered his own brother-in-law and used chemical weapons on his own people?

This Arato-logic gives credibility to what GF Professor Christopher Hitchens boldly wrote in his going-away article for The Nation, a publication he contributed to for 20 years: “I have come to realize that the magazine…is becoming the voice and echo chamber of those who truly believe that John Ashcroft is a greater menace than Osama bin Laden.”

Professor Arato does not write for The Nation, but the troubling point remains: it seems, for many on the Left, that Bush is more dangerous or sinister than Saddam.

Hitchens quit The Nation after twenty excellent years of minority reporting because he was fed up with the lack of debate at the magazine over the Clintons, Kosovo, 9/11, Afghanistan and finally Iraq.

(Some of us wish he had stayed there for this very reason.
And I suspect the little sheet has lost many readers as a consequence).

Hitchens, to the disgust and astonishment of many of his colleagues and former admirers, supports a war to remove Saddam Hussein, just as he supported wars against the Taliban, Al-Qaeda and Slobodan Milosevic.

He argues that these are the revolutionary struggles - these are the movements the Left, in all countries, should fight for.

We should oppose “Islamo-fascists” and brutal dictators with everything we have got, even if our own governments are far from perfect.

Hitchens compares what is happening now with the scene in 1939, when many British leftists opposed war with Germany because of British Imperialism in India.

This strange and false reasoning corresponds neatly with the strange and false assertion that one has to be faultless in order to criticize others.

Furthermore, allowing Saddam to stay in power is a defense of the status quo, a conservative position.

“The fires had not yet gone out at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, a year ago, before the War Party had introduced its revised plans for American empire.

What many saw as a tragedy, they saw instantly as an opportunity to achieve US hegemony over an alienated Islamic world.”

This was written by the renowned liberal champion Patrick Buchanan, but could have just as easily been uttered by Noam Chomsky or Andrew Arato.

Indeed, Hitchens goes so far as to contend that “the most serious opposition to the war comes, at the moment, from the Right.

The Left is just making its usual noise.
Nobody cares what they say.
It is of no further relevance.
It has no principle to it.
It doesn’t take any risks.
It isn’t embarking on anything radical or analytical.”

Many on the Right are afraid a war will destabilize their system in the Middle East; antiwar factions on both sides favor the policies of containment and deterrence - the two terms most disparaged by the Left during the Cold War.

Hitchens, on the contrary, welcomes the prospect of this war because it is effectively, “dumping the Nixon doctrine.

It is dumping the idea we rule through client states like Pakistan and Saudi Arabia, the client states that betrayed us, that shot us in the front on the 11th of September, that incubated Al-Qaeda, that resent their client status.”

And this is why those on the Right like Scowcroft and even Kissinger are suspicious of this Iraqi meddling - it is potentially subversive.

Hitchens has been communicating and working with opposition groups in Iraq for three decades; he views the issue, in part, as a matter of loyalty to his Iraqi comrades: “When I first became a socialist, the imperative of international solidarity was the essential if not the defining thing, whether the cause was popular or risky or not.”

By displacing the Baathists the US government will provide a real opportunity for the Iraqi and Kurdish peoples to liberate themselves.

This is true even if it is not what truly motivates Bush’s policy.

An unintended result of the first Gulf War was the partial liberation of Kurdistan.

In this autonomous enclave in northern Iraq optimism has spread over what appear to be signs of pluralism, freedom and overall development.

Lastly, dissident groups in Iraq recognize that the removal of their despot will also mean the end of UN sanctions, which have wreaked havoc on the poor and defenseless since 1992 (the fault of both Saddam and the UN).

Oil is an additional reason to wage war, not one to oppose it - unless we would rather continue to have its distribution controlled by Hussein than by a (potentially democratic) government friendly to the international community and the United States.

Hitchens makes the additional point that “with Iraqi oil back on stream and anything like an open society there, you don’t have to depend on Saudi Arabians anymore.

You can say to the Saudi, your monopoly means nothing to me.”

This does not, of course, mean that we shouldn’t be putting more time and money into the development of alternative sources of energy (and to begin employing existing technologies on a large scale).

Everybody knows oil is finite.

However, it is unwise to shun the practical politics of oil in the meantime, as many on the Left would have it.

Most of the same people that oppose a war against Saddam opposed the war in Afghanistan, as well as the war on terrorism in general.

And they are making very similar arguments in all cases, which, when simplified amount to something like, ‘a war will do much more harm than any good.

’ However, their dire predictions about Afghanistan were shown to be false.

The campaign did not create a humanitarian catastrophe, scores of people did not starve to death (6 million was the estimate); millions of refugees did not pour over the border; it did not become a “quagmire.

” (Refer to any of the literature coming out of the Left, in September and October 2001 especially, for examples of these claims).

Civilian casualties were avoided whenever possible, in part because of the precision technology mastered over years of massive military budgets.

Noam Chomsky and his co-thinkers like to cite a former professor of mine, Marc Herold, who calculated that US bombings have killed 3,000 Afghani civilians (“at least”) and counting.

Herold derived this figure from a collection of European and Arab newspaper reports.

The presumed and often stated objective of this tally is to demonstrate moral equivalence between the 9/11 incident and US retaliation.

All other non-Pentagon, usually left-leaning efforts to add up the numbers have yielded much lower results (approximately 1,000 was the highest).

And there is an important moral and intellectual distinction between premeditated killing, which is murder, and unintentional killing or killing in self-defense, which is not.

The long-term effect of the raid will almost certainly end up saving many more lives (and provide improved lives for millions more) in the long run than those that were taken away.

This is grim business for sure, but as long as the “principled” Left refuses to engage in this complex, necessary debate it cannot have an impact on actual policy.

In this sense Hitchens is correct - the Left is “irrelevant.”

The results of the bombing campaign in Afghanistan were largely encouraging: the war was over quickly, we made significant headway in debilitating Al-Qaeda, Afghanis took to the streets to cheer, music was back on the airwaves in Kabul.

By smashing the Taliban, the US obliterated the largest impediment to that country’s progress.

It remains to be seen how things will eventually unfold, but we can now at least hope that something resembling an open and just society will emerge.

According to Hitchens, Afghanistan was the first country ever to have been “bombed out of the stone age.”

“As someone who has done a good deal of marching and public speaking about Vietnam, Chile, South Africa, Palestine and East Timor in his time (and would do it all again), I can only hint at how much I despise a Left that thinks of Osama bin Laden as a slightly misguided anti-imperialist,” writes Hitchens.

It is interesting to note that bin Laden, who is allegedly revolting against imperialism, is himself an imperialist.

He condemned the UN/Australian rescue of East Timor, a liberation that is almost certainly connected to the recent vengeance bombing in Bali.

So, bin Laden is not above supporting everything he is alleged to be reacting against.

Indeed, Noam Chomsky’s work for the cause in East Timor is worthy of awe, rendering his robotic comparisons between bin Ladenism and Western depredations all the more disappointing.

It seems as though the Chomsky Left of today cannot move beyond the Cold War mentality.

This faction of the Left assumes, in part because of America’s brutal war in Indochina, that the US Government, particularly a Republican administration, is incapable of effecting constructive change abroad.

But the dynamic has changed over the last decade.

As The Nation writer Adam Shatz concedes, “I never saw the Soviets, the Cubans, the Sandinistas or the ANC as enemies.

Al-Qaeda is another matter altogether.”

And so is Saddam Hussein, I might add.

Hitchens bitterly concludes, “Instead of internationalism, we find now among the Left a sort of affectless, neutralist, smirking isolationism,” writes Hitchens.

The past does not always predict the future.

It is a logical fallacy to conclude (as almost all antiwar advocates do) that because the US government propped up Hussein and bin Laden in the past America has no credibility to oust them now.

As Hitchens points out, the fact that the US did support these two awful individuals only increases its responsibility to dispose of them now.

And actually, as Americans, it is our responsibility.

Undoubtedly, there are some strong reasons to question a war in Iraq.

Hitchens writes a concise summary of causes for concern: Only a fool would trust the Bush Administration to see all of this.

I am appalled that by this late date no proclamation has been issued to the people of Iraq, announcing the aims and principles of the coming intervention.

Nor has any indictment of Saddam Hussein for crimes against humanity been readied.

Nothing has been done to conciliate Iran, where the mullahs are in decline.

The Palestinian plight is being allowed to worsen.

These misgivings are obviously not peripheral.

(As I am writing this, an indictment against the sadistic Iraqi leader is finally being drawn up).

Hitchens has been one of the most prominent and effective left-wing critics of US foreign policy over the last twenty years; he is well aware of America’s inimical capabilities, and that is why his defection is so significant.

Nothing will persuade the antiwar Left (or antiwar Buchanan Right) that a campaign to remove Saddam and free the Iraqi people is justified.

There will always be an excuse to oppose it.

At first, the complaints were that the US intended to strike Iraq unilaterally, that everybody in Europe, Russia, China and the Arab world was against Bush, and that there existed no evidence of Hussein possessing WMDs.

Now that those critiques have been answered and Bush has voluntarily (and shrewdly) gone through the United Nations, graciously agreeing to afford Saddam one last chance with inspections, the argument has changed: by attacking Iraq, we are likely to prod Saddam into using his WMDs (the same ones he never had in the first place) against us or Israel.

Hitchens calls this game “subject change.”

When every other peace marcher was demanding that Bush provide proof of Hussein possessing WMDs, Hitchens wrote, “It is obvious to me that the “antiwar” side would not be convinced even if all the allegations made against Saddam Hussein were proven, and even if the true views of the Iraqi people could be expressed.”

And because of this, there is no incentive for anyone in power (or anyone at all) to take the Left seriously.

Another example of this evident implacability: GF Professor Robin Blackburn believes the UN has no credibility because it gives too much power to the five permanent members of the Security Council, and it has become thoroughly corrupted.

So he dismisses the new multilateral approach to Iraq, and he is certain we will go to war no matter what because there is a “crisis of capitalist institutions” and the US has to exploit the oil reserves in Iraq in order to save the system.

Everything has already been pre-determined.

The most cogent Arato/Blackburn/Chomsky critique runs something like this: ‘It does not do any good to talk loosely about a new humane foreign policy of helping to emancipate the downtrodden and targeting oppressive dictators when that is not really what our governors intend to do.

Why should we believe Hitchens, who all the sudden claims that the US can truly stand as a beacon of freedom, despite all of the crimes that were committed in the past and are currently being committed?

Bush hardly even affects concern for the downtrodden - the declared pretext for targeting Iraq is self-defense.

’ (And we can agree that commercial interests are another reason).

‘The motives will always be based on crass self-interest.

’ Admittedly, these are not easy questions to resolve.

First, we can point to the success of NATO operations in the Balkans during the 1990’s (better late than never) - what vital US interests were at stake there?

These were largely humanitarian interventions spearheaded by Tony Blair and the commanders in the field who were horrified by what they saw on the ground.

Another sign of US willingness to promote decency is, of course, Afghanistan.

The terrible events of September 11 has further altered past geopolitical realities, allowing new opportunities to surface.

I contend that it is in the broader interests of the United States to pursue a morall-driven foreign policy, alongside a policy of self-interest/self-defense.

At the very least, it is not against our interests, and our strategists are beginning to realize this - the dual failures of containment and ruling through client regimes is now too hard to overlook.

And there is a great deal of overlap between these two approaches at the moment.

The time is right to synthesize humanitarian interventions with more conventional forms of intervention; the Left can either help forge this process for the better, or play the role of malcontent, sitting on the sidelines of history, smugly feigning superiority to it all.

Ultimately, for or against this campaign in Iraq, the Left needs to remain, at the least, open to the idea of military intervention as a potentially constructive and progressive endeavor; it needs to be able to re-examine its positions, to carefully consider each new situation as it arises, instead of always cynically assuming the worst.

The Left is becoming more and more alienated from mainstream America and marginalized within the political process (this is scarcely surprising what with Gore Vidal now claiming that Bush knew about the September 11 attacks, could have stopped them easily, but deliberately chose not to).

A recent poll found that only 2% of Americans would oppose a Security Council resolution to inspect Iraq first and then authorize a strike on a condition of non-compliance.

The message: we need to give George Bush and our allies a chance, just as we are giving Saddam another chance.

Even though I obviously trust Christopher Hitchens’s instincts and reasoned arguments over everybody else’s in regards to Iraq, I cannot, just as obviously, know for sure that he is right.

I side with Hitchens primarily because, unlike his adversaries, he is challenging the way we on the Left think.

He has the ability to turn inwards and re-evaluate old positions and tactics; he understands the connection between open debate, conflict, and progress in all aspects of life.

Has Chomsky ever second-guessed himself?

As a result of his experiences Hitchens possesses a unique and genuine understanding of the nature of the threat we are faced with.

His critical insight and analysis in this post 9/11 era should serve as a wake-up call to those who have been resting on their laurels for far too long.

Anyone interested in making the Left “relevant” again would do well to start paying attention.



22 posted on 03/13/2003 10:30:50 PM PST by Allan
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To: Danny Ainge
Love your comments and jumpshot.
23 posted on 03/13/2003 10:31:58 PM PST by Chunga
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To: jwalsh07
Pat's a conservative, "my friend", in the real meaning of the word. The so-called isolationist position prevailed up until WWI. Buchanan is probably the only intelligent non-liberal (classical liberalism) in the country.
24 posted on 03/13/2003 10:32:17 PM PST by Face Man II
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To: Danny Ainge
Bump
25 posted on 03/13/2003 10:33:19 PM PST by Allan
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To: Danny Ainge
What does everyone think of this article, which I found on Hitchens' web site? I think it's pretty damn good myself.
26 posted on 03/13/2003 10:33:53 PM PST by Face Man II
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To: Danny Ainge
bttttt
27 posted on 03/13/2003 10:34:05 PM PST by ellery
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To: jwalsh07
The best player on BYU, when I was there? Probably me, quite frankly. Did you see the UCLA game? You must have seen "the play" at least.
28 posted on 03/13/2003 10:34:55 PM PST by Face Man II
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To: MJY1288
LOL- yeah it's nice when proponents of our ideas don't look like they just woke up on a park bench. ;-D
29 posted on 03/13/2003 10:39:59 PM PST by lawgirl (Running from the Grand Ennui)
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To: Danny Ainge
If you are really Danny Ainge, you can tell us what happened in the last minute of the game at San Diego State in 1981.
30 posted on 03/13/2003 10:42:17 PM PST by Electron Wizard
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To: Danny Ainge
The best player on BYU, when I was there? Probably me, quite frankly

LOL, OK you've established your bona fides, you're definitely the Danny Ainge I watched.

As for the article, Hitchens is correct about Iraq and Pat is wrong.

Buchanans first instinct is always isolationist and it blinds him to certain realities. The realities in Iraq are as follows:

Saddam Hussein will do anything in his power to put WMD's in the hands of those who can deliver them to the lower 48.

His history of supporting terrorists and terrorism is undeniable. Abu Abbas, Abu Nidal, Hamas, Hezbollah, Zwahiri. Answar al Oslam, the list is endless.

Add them up and the US has no choice but to disarm and remove the current regime. Coincident with this being in the US national interest is the fact that we rid of the world of a genocidal and homicidal maniac.

31 posted on 03/13/2003 10:43:55 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: Electron Wizard
Don't push it, EW. Accept the genuine article.
32 posted on 03/13/2003 10:44:50 PM PST by MHGinTN (If you can read this, you've had life support from someone. Promote Life Support for others.)
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To: Danny Ainge
By the way, welcome to FR.
33 posted on 03/13/2003 10:45:43 PM PST by jwalsh07
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To: Danny Ainge
Hmmm. Think the Lakers have it this season or is it the Kings/Spurs year?
34 posted on 03/13/2003 10:46:19 PM PST by Citizen of the Savage Nation
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To: Danny Ainge
Great article, and welcome to the site! Be prepared to be given a hard time for the first few days, don't take it personally -- happens to all newbies.

Oh, and thanks for your contributions to the great Celtics teams in the 80's. I always admired the way you never backed down and found lots of little ways to influence the game that didn't show up in the box score.

35 posted on 03/13/2003 10:46:52 PM PST by VeritatisSplendor
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To: jwalsh07
I agree with you. Buchanan is wrong, but at least he's consistent (consistently bad). AND, what I'm arguing is that he's taking the truly 'conservative' position in this debate (as is, believe it or not, Chomsky, although he doesn't realize it). Hitchens is right and so is Wolfowitz, but it's a radical position that they're taking.
36 posted on 03/13/2003 10:47:35 PM PST by Face Man II
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To: Danny Ainge
John McCain and I are good friends.

OH my. Better put on your flameproof underwear around here, my friend. ;-D

Welcome to FR! I wasn't trying to criticize about paragraphs, but sometimes you have to separate them out with the right HTML to get them to show up on a cut and paste. (I know from experience- my first article post was HUGE and I had to ask for it to be pulled LOL!)

And tell your friend Hitchens he has some friends here on FR- I pinged MJY to this article b/c we both like him a lot. He always has fresh, intelligent things to say, and doesn't pull any punches. Refreshing!

37 posted on 03/13/2003 10:48:04 PM PST by lawgirl (Running from the Grand Ennui)
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To: Danny Ainge
It's a fine article and Hitchens is one of the few liberals I respect.

The contention that liberals are marginalizing themselves to the outskirts of relevant debate is a notion with which I agree, and it's a welcome development.

The idea that the United States cannot act without the authority of a UN mandate authorizing force is a hallmark of global and domestic anti-Americanism, and I run across people who hold these ideas fairly frequently, but that's probably because I'm in the entertainment industry. Thankfully the majority of Americans don't agree.

I thought the author's assertion that the left's anti-war contingent is constantly changing the focus of the debate when their prior objections to war are found to be wanting was right on the money.

In addition, any article that takes the vile Noam Chomsky to task is a bolt of sunshine.

38 posted on 03/13/2003 10:49:48 PM PST by Chunga
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To: Electron Wizard
Look friend, I don't want to make this about me. We could talk sports all night; but we're here to talk politics. In 1981, I was playing baseball for the Blue Jays...

I'm more interested in the notion that the neoconservatives have become the real radical in this country.
39 posted on 03/13/2003 10:51:56 PM PST by Face Man II
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To: Danny Ainge
Looking at the artical, its clear that Hitchens hasn't left the Left, the Left left him. There may be some truth to that, if I can get the thought of Danny Ainge talking about Chomsky out of my head, I can give it more thought.
40 posted on 03/13/2003 10:54:55 PM PST by Citizen of the Savage Nation
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