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Politics : Politics for Pros- moderated -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Dayuhan who wrote (9350)9/25/2003 4:45:01 AM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 793649
 
Meanwhile, back in "Neocon land."
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Vision of the neocons stays fixed on making hard choices

Oliver Burkeman in Washington
Tuesday September 23, 2003
The Guardian

Every Tuesday morning during the Iraq war Washington's opinion-makers and journalists knew there was only one place to be: at the "black-coffee briefings" held at the American Enterprise Institute, a fortress-like building on M and 17th streets, opposite the main offices of the National Geographic magazine.
Technically, AEI is a thinktank. More than that, though, it is the headquarters of the intellectual movement known as neoconservatism. Its staff includes famous names such as Richard Perle, Irving Kristol and Newt Gingrich. The magazine Weekly Standard, the neocon bible, is published at the same address.

Black coffee was not strictly compulsory at the briefings - adding milk was allowed - but it did seem a particularly apt metaphor. The neocons felt they were delivering stern, sobering truths, wake-up calls with all the kick of a strong espresso: that liberating Iraq and making an awesome show of American power was vital for the US and the world, that democracy would spread through the region as dictators fell like dominoes.

Resistance would be minimal: the war could be fought, most argued, with the lean hi-tech military championed by Donald Rumsfeld. But not with the UN and Europe, who did not have the stomach for the new era of muscular American power. But that was then; September in Washington finds the ultra-hawks in ferment. They confess to being taken aback by events in Iraq. Some are responding by arguing that the terrorist attacks on US troops there may actually be, counterintuitively, a good thing.

Sceptical

In interviews with the Guardian they expressed deep scepticism about President Bush's new overtures to the UN, accusing the White House of a lack of commitment - and, most surprising of all, rounding on their former hero Donald Rumsfeld. The distance between the president and the movement widely credited with persuading him to go to war in the first place has never seemed greater.

"All of us surely understand that, but for the president, we wouldn't be arguing about postwar Iraq - we would still be arguing about what to do with Saddam," said Thomas Donnelly, an AEI scholar and senior fellow at the Project for the New American Century, the influential rightwing group whose founding signatories include Dick Cheney, the vice-president, Mr Rumsfeld, and his deputy, Paul Wolfowitz.

"But having got rid of the guy, we're now understanding that regime change is a much larger undertaking than we thought it was. But this is a unique American responsibility, and passing the buck to the rest of the world, a good portion of which didn't agree with us in the first place, is not a great idea."

There is still plenty of the old defiant optimism that prompted one AEI scholar, Danielle Pletka, to publish a paper in April, mid-war, bluntly entitled Everything is Going Well. Mr Donnelly and his colleagues are emphatic that they still feel that way. But insufficient troops, he argues, mean "we're making it harder than it has to be".

The near-daily grim news of US casualties in Iraq has inspired some audacious responses - most notably what has been labelled the "flypaper theory", pungently summarised by the conservative commentator Andrew Sullivan. "Being based in Iraq helps us not only because of actual bases, but because the American presence diverts terrorist attention away from elsewhere," he argued on his website.

Even General Ricardo Sanchez, commander of the coalition's ground forces in Iraq, appeared to subscribe to this theory, conceding that Iraq was "a terrorist magnet" but adding: "This is exactly where we want to fight them." Other neoconservatives disagree, however - one of numerous ways in which their previous consensus seems to be fragmenting.

Some dissenters have seen the breach with the Pentagon coming since before the war. As an example, Mr Rumsfeld was reported to have personally delayed the dispatch to Iraq of heavy artillery units based in Texas and Germany. Even to many hawks that seemed a foolhardy degree of commitment to the "revolution in military affairs", the doctrine that America will win the wars of the future with light, nimble forces using laser-guided missiles and precision bombs.

"Rumsfeld, in particular, has become a bit of a problem, because he's so committed to the revolution in military affairs that he doesn't like the idea of American ground troops patrolling, doing low-tech things," said William Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard.

"But ... sometimes the world doesn't allow you to do everything with precision bombs. And I think we should be willing to do what it takes."

In the interest both of American influence and the Iraqi people a much bigger commitment of US troops and money is essential, he argues. This is why the president's request for billions more in funds has spread some relief among the neocons. Some privately hint that they might prefer it if French and German opposition to Mr Bush at the UN were to result in the defeat of US negotiators there.

One prominent pro-war voice has even said so publicly. "It would be a delightful irony if Jacques Chirac prevented President Bush from putting the wrong foot forward," Reuel Marc Gerecht of the AEI wrote recently in the Weekly Standard.

"[The administration has] been trying to do it on the cheap, and that's a mistake," Mr Kristol said. "What's going to rectify that mistake is not the UN - it's the $87bn, and a more urgent full-throated US commitment to getting it right, doing the reconstruction, and laying the conditions for the Iraqis taking over."

If the motives for urging an attack on Iraq in the first place seemed ever-changing, that might have been because, in the words of the liberal Washington commentator Joshua Micah Marshall, "it was the classic overdetermined question". Several of these thinkers' deeply held convictions, in other words, all pointed to the same conclusion.

Passion

They have a passionate belief in the benefits of US-style democracy. They want to stun potential enemies, both terrorists and "rogue states", into realising the scale of American force. They want to reduce US reliance on such allies as Saudi Arabia. And reduce regional pressure on Israel. All dictated the same thing: attacking Iraq. "There was a period where they had a way of winning all the arguments," said Mr Marshall, who edits the website TalkingPointsMemo.com. "But now they're off their game plan."

A White House that appeared in tune with their thinking has proved to have other concerns: proving a point about military technology, in Mr Rumsfeld's case, and, in the president's, winning the next election. "There are peple around the president who can see that, politically, this is a mess," Mr Marshall said. "But the neocons see it all in grand-historical terms - if it takes 100,000 soldiers, if it takes a draft, who cares? We gotta do it."

Their clarion call now is for "Iraqification" of Iraq: an argument which brings the neoconservatives curiously close to the viewpoint put by the French and Germans at the UN. "We need a game plan for a swift transfer to the Iraqis, because we haven't won until we have government by the Iraqis," said Danielle Pletka, author of the optimistic mid-war paper, although going to the UN "doesn't accelerate that, it decelerates it."

Ms Pletka's argument represents yet another emerging camp. She blamed problems in Iraq on "a bizarre colonial attitude" on the part of Colin Powell's state department and the British. But her comments underline a pervasive sense that the marriage of the neocons and the Rumsfeld wing of the Bush administration may be heading for the rocks.

Those with old-fashioned colonialist attitudes had influence over the governance of the country, Ms Pletka said, "because they've got the bodies ... And yet, for reasons utterly mysterious to me, the Pentagon refuses to send its people there. They should be making sure they have a big role there, too. And they won't. And I have no idea why."

Right stuff: the main players
By Julian Borger

Paul Wolfowitz

The most visible neocon in Washington, whose power transcends his modest title of deputy secretary of defence. Like almost all neocons, he is a former Democrat, combining a liberal sense of mission to spread democratic ideas with a traditional conservative readiness to use military force. But he is now at loggerheads with the "paleocons" about how long to stay in Iraq

Richard Perle

Wolfowitz's mentor and veteran cold warrior from the Reagan administration, where he was known as the "prince of darkness". Like many a neocon, he began his career working for the hawkish Democratic senator Henry "Scoop" Jackson before defecting to the Republicans. Forced to step down as chairman of the defence policy board in March after his many business connections raised questions of conflict of interest

Douglas Feith

Another veteran Scoop Jackson Democrat, Feith stands out for his close ties with Israel's Likud party. His former law company had offices in Washington and Tel Aviv, and when he became undersecretary of defence for policy, overseeing the office of special plans and its search for damning "intelligence" on Iraq, he remained open to input from Sharon government. Seen as the neocon most likely to fall if things turn from bad to worse in Iraq

Elliott Abrams

The White House's chief adviser on the Middle East became notorious in the Reagan administration when he admitted misleading Congress about the Iran-contra scandal. Abrams, yet another Scoop Jackson graduate, backed Likud on the Middle East

William Kristol

Offspring of one of the first neocon dynasty. Irving Kristol was a founder of the movement. His magazine, the Weekly Standard, is the main neocon sounding board in Washington
guardian.co.uk



To: Dayuhan who wrote (9350)9/25/2003 7:32:11 AM
From: LindyBill  Respond to of 793649
 
TCS is a gold mine today. I talk a lot about the difference between "Libertarian" and "Social" Conservatives. This article does so at length. His comments about Governor Lingle here in Hawaii are "right on."
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South Park in the Blue States

By John Tabin Published 09/25/2003

"I feel the people of California have been punished enough. From the time they get up in the morning and flush the toilet, they're taxed. When they go get a coffee, they're taxed. When they get in their car, they're taxed. When they go to the gas station, they're taxed. When they go to lunch, they're taxed. This goes on all day long. Tax. Tax. Tax. Tax. Tax." -- Arnold Schwarzenegger

By the time Mr. Schwarzenegger had spoken those words last month, he'd already been denounced as a liberal by conservatives from National Review to Rush Limbaugh to the American Prowler.

Part of the reason for this is that on most cultural issues, Schwarzenegger is a liberal. But California is a culturally liberal state; though conservatives' purist instincts run deep, that can't by itself explain the animus toward Schwarzenegger. Nor were those conservatives reacting to the foolishness of Schwarzenegger-confidante Warren "Tax My Life, Please!" Buffett; their critiques started before that kerfuffle (which Schwarzenegger's anti-tax noises were, of course, meant to scuttle.)

I think instead that conservatives' suspicions toward Arnold come from their dealings with the self-proclaimed moderates within the Republican Party. As National Review's Jonah Goldberg put it in 2001, "I don't think you necessarily have to be pro-life to be a good conservative, but I do find that once people become pro-choice they tend to be less reliably conservative on all sorts of issues." Taxes are certainly one of those issues. When people talk about "Rockefeller Republicans," after all, they're invoking the New York governor who first introduced state sales and income taxes.

But must they be? Larry Sabato, among other political analysts, argues that the 2000 Red vs. Blue map is enduring because of "hot button social issues" -- culture, in other words. He does not argue that Blue-staters enjoy paying taxes more. And a look at the Blue states reveals a number of prominent Republicans who are in tune on social issues with their cultural liberal states, but nonetheless take seriously Bob Novak's proclamation that "the only reason God put Republicans on this Earth was to cut taxes."

When Robert Ehrlich of Maryland became the first Republican governor to sign a bill relaxing penalties for medical marijuana last May, he noted that "there are clearly two wings of the party on social issues. One is more conservative, and one is more libertarian. I belong to the latter, and I always have." Ehrlich's signature political fight is libertarian on both the social and economic front: He wants to legalize slot-machines (which could equal a revenue-infusion for the state of up to $800 million), while his antagonists in the legislature prefer a tax increase -- which Ehrlich has vetoed.

Ehrlich is hardly the only socially liberal Republican with a true commitment to the GOP's economic philosophy. Take Linda Lingle. The first Republican governor of Hawaii in forty years, she's far to the left of the national GOP on social issues, though slightly to the right of her Democratic opponents: she's pro-choice but supports a parental notification law; she favors the state's same-sex domestic partnership provision but opposes outright gay marriage; she's against the death penalty but says that if support is strong in the legislature she wouldn't veto a bill to reinstate capital punishment for the murder of a minor who has been sexually assaulted. Though none of this is particularly remarkable in the Aloha State, Lingle would of course be seen as a flaming liberal in much of the Republic. Except for one thing: Lingle is one of only eight governors who has signed the Americans for Tax Reform pledge to never raise taxes.

Two other Blue State governors have also signed the ATR pledge. One is John Rowland of Connecticut, who's pro-choice and has signed a domestic partnership bill into law. Though both Rowland and his legislature are now rather unpopular thanks to the Nutmeg State's budget stand-off, Rowland's anti-tax pledge has served him well in the past; he's now in his third term. The other is Tim Pawlenty of Minnesota. Pawlenty is a bit more socially conservative than the other governors I've mentioned (though he was still to the left of his Republican primary opponent), and was blessed in 2002 to face, in addition to his Democratic opponent, a formidable Independence Party challenge by former-Democrat Tim Penny; Pawlenty would have had a much tougher time winning statewide in a two-way race. But Minnesota's third-party politics can't by itself explain why Walter Mondale's state narrowly edges out South Carolina for the highest percentage of state legislators who have signed the ATR pledge.

Some readers are no doubt wondering now about one nagging issue, so lets get to it: though none of these low-tax liberals is a crusader for the Second Amendment, they can generally be characterized as moderately pro-gun; the National Rifle Association Scores for Ehrlich, Lingle, Rowland, and Pawlenty are B, B, A, and A respectively. Anti-gun political assaults have mostly failed to stick to them, particularly in Ehrlich's case. Schwarzenegger is the outlier on this issue; he told Larry Elder "I think that people should have the right to bear arms," but has gotten specific only on gun regulations he'd support (background checks, an assault-weapon ban, trigger locks "under certain circumstances"), not on those he'd oppose.

It's been argued here at TCS that there exists a constituency of culturally liberal South Park Republicans. It's clear that in the Blue States, there exist politicians with corresponding attitudes -- and equally clear that they succeed by sticking to the economic principles that characterize the GOP at its best.

John Tabin is a Baltimore-based freelance writer who's website is JohnTabin.com.

Copyright © 2003 Tech Central Station - www.techcentralstation.com