Posted on 07/10/2003 6:17:24 AM PDT by Int
Conservatives' core duty on WMD
There was a time when conservatives fought passionately to preserve America as a limited constitutional republic. That was, in fact, the essence of conservatism. It's one reason Franklin Roosevelt's vast expansion of government through the New Deal aroused such bitter opposition on the right.
But many conservative activists seem to have lost that philosophical commitment. They now advocate autocratic executive rule, largely unconstrained by constitutional procedures or popular opinions.
This curious attitude is evident in the conservative response to the gnawing question: Where are Saddam Hussein's weapons of mass destruction? A surprising number of conservatives respond: So what? He must have had them; maybe he gave them away. And, anyway, Hussein was a bad guy. In their view, even to ask the question is to mount a partisan attack on President Bush, and that's downright unpatriotic.It always seemed likely that Baghdad possessed WMD. Not only did Iraq once maintain a WMD program, but how else to explain the regime's obstructionist behavior during the inspections process?
Yet it made equal sense to assume that a desperate Hussein would use any WMD to defend his regime - and that serious elements of Baghdad's arsenal would be quickly found.
There may be a logical explanation for the fact that WMD were not used and have not been located; significant WMD stockpiles might eventually turn up.
Moreover, it's hard to imagine the administration simply concocting its WMD claims. The president, though a practiced politician, isn't the type to lie so blatantly. Whatever the faults of his lieutenants, none seems likely to advance a falsehood that would be so hard to maintain.
But the longer we go without any discoveries, the more questionable the prewar claims appear to have been. The allies have checked all of the sites originally targeted for inspection, arrested leading Baath Party members, and offered substantial rewards for information. Even in Hussein's centralized regime, more than a few people must have known where any WMD stocks were hidden or transferred and would be able to help now.
Which means it is entirely fair to ask the administration, where are the WMD? The answer matters for the simplest practical reasons. Possible intelligence failures need to be corrected. Washington's loss of credibility should be addressed; saying "trust me" will be much harder for this president in the future or a future president.
Stonewalling poses an even greater threat to our principles of government. It matters whether the president lied to the American people. Political fibs are common, not just about with whom presidents have had sex, but also to advance foreign-policy goals. Remember the Tonkin Gulf incident, inaccurate claims of Iraqi troop movements against Saudi Arabia before the first Gulf war, and repetition of false atrocity claims from ethnic Albanian guerrillas during the Kosovo war.
Perhaps the administration manipulated the evidence, choosing information that backed its view, turning assumptions into certainties, and hyping equivocal materials. That, too, would hardly be unusual. But no president should take the US into war under false pretenses. There is no more important decision: The American people deserve to hear official doubts as well as certitudes.
The point is not that the administration is necessarily guilty of misbehavior, but that it should be forced to defend its decisionmaking process.
Pointing to substitute justifications for the war just won't do. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul Wolfowitz notes that the alleged Al Qaeda connection divided the administration internally, and humanitarian concerns did not warrant risking American lives. Only fear over Iraqi possession of WMD unified the administration, won the support of allies, particularly Britain, and served as the centerpiece of the administration's case. If the WMD didn't exist, or were ineffective, Washington's professed case for war collapses.
Conservatives' lack of interest in the WMD question takes an even more ominous turn when combined with general support for presidential warmaking. Republicans - think President Eisenhower, for instance - once took seriously the requirement that Congress declare war. These days, however, Republican presidents and legislators, backed by conservative intellectuals, routinely argue that the chief executive can unilaterally take America into war.
Thus, in their view, once someone is elected president, he or she faces no legal or political constraint. The president doesn't need congressional authority; Washington doesn't need UN authority. Allied support is irrelevant. The president needn't offer the public a justification for going to war that holds up after the conflict ends. The president may not even be questioned about the legitimacy of his professed justification. Accept his word and let him do whatever he wants, irrespective of circumstances.
This is not the government created by the Founders. This is not the government that any believer in liberty should favor.
It is foolish to turn the Iraq war, a prudential political question, into a philosophical test for conservatism. It is even worse to demand unthinking support for Bush. He should be pressed on the issue of WMD - by conservatives. Fidelity to the Constitution and republican government demands no less.
Doug Bandow is a senior fellow at the Cato Institute. He served as a special assistant to President Ronald Reagan.
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Yes anyone who doesn't agree with Protagoras that we should have totally free trade is a big government liberal.
You'll have to learn to live with it, but current policies will be changed eventually, and it won't be done by democrats.
My initial reaction to the article was the fact a non-conservative organization was telling conservatives what they should think or do.
As far as Bush, don't have an opinion one way or the other at this point because I haven't seen any convincing evidence yet he knowingly mislead the public. The only thing I wish he would do is close them borders.
Nor have I, and I am doubtful he did so. But, as the article says, that is not the point.
The point is not that the administration is necessarily guilty of misbehavior, but that it should be forced to defend its decisionmaking process.
If they made bad judgements, or made errors, it should be examined. I don't need to know the details of how decisions were made, but we ought to have some confidence it is less likely to happen again. Just saying, "Opps, sorry, we'll do better next time" is not enough when we are talking about Americans dying in combat.
Absolutely. That's why the No Need For Validation list isn't a very long one.
But surely included are people like RR, Dubya, Peggy Noonan, Jean Kirkpatrick and a few others.
The worst thing Bush or any politician can do is act like they're hiding something. He should just come out and say mistakes were made regarding information given to him and let the chips fall where they may. Saddam was a terrorist and there was good reason to take him out anyway.
If he doesn't put a stop to it, the democrats, and the Cato Institutes of the world will beat him over the head with it forever, and what I'd really hate to see is political fallout that affects House races.
Actually is goes deeper than that.Perhaps deeper than you can fathom. It goes to ;
Anyone who thinks it is proper for government thugs to tell people what they can buy, at what price and from whom and what they can pay and what they can earn is a big government liberal. And that is being charitable. Partially free trade is a like a partially preganant women. It can't happen. You are free or you aren't. The degree of your enslavment is irrelevant to the real picture.
You'll have to learn to live with it, but current policies will be changed eventually, and it won't be done by democrats.
Nonsense. You will be long dead before the government gets so utterly whacky that it goes totally backward and sends us back toward the middle ages. By then it will be the last few years of the experiment and freedom will already be dead because of thugs and criminals and the terminally moronic useful idiots who support them.
No one is saying a company can't move to Vietnam and pay workers .20 an hour if they wish. But it is totally within government's right to tax the imports of their products. They used to do that if it undercutted the American worker and it wasn't tyranny, it was government acting in the best interests of the taxpayers. And no, the return to at least some resemblance of that policy won't be after I'm dead, but within the next 5 to 10 years after millions of unemployed voters finally rise up and say enough.
Hiring whomever you want and selling products to whomever will buy them at whatever price arrived upon without coersion is free trade.
I am a classic liberal. I believe in individual liberty and personal responsibilty. What you believe is of no consequence to me.
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