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Neo-conservatives influence U.S. policy 

James J. Zogby

Gulf News,  30-06-2003

A number of articles have appeared in recent weeks shedding new light on the thinking of the neo-conservatives who, until now, appeared to have the upper hand in shaping the foreign policy of the Bush administration. It is only in the past few years that attention has been paid to this small but important group of ideologues.

But now, several publications have featured stories and analyses of the group, their intellectual roots and their modus operandi. It may well be that the neo-conservatives' singular success - the march to war with Iraq - is what finally brought them out of the shadows into the public eye.

Attention is being given to their earlier successes in dominating several conservative think-tanks and magazines and key positions in the Bush administration's foreign policy apparatus and their small but influential network of columnists and commentators that have allowed them to shape the policy debate both inside and outside of government.

By now the names of the key players in this movement and their inter-relationships have become well known.

Whether connected by marriage or because they went to school together or shared common employers, friends, and teachers or simply live in the same neighbourhoods, the group and their relationship with one another has become the target of journalists from the right and the left.

What has also come to light are the political roots of these neo-conservatives. They were, in the main, once liberal Democrats who sprang, as it were, out of the womb of Commentary Magazine (a publication subsidised by the American Jewish Committee) and the offices of the late Henry "Scoop" Jackson (a Democratic Senator known for his hawkish views on foreign policy).

It was this still fledgling neo-conservative movement that broke with President Carter's human rights-based foreign policy and working with a then little-known Israeli politician, Benjamin Netanyahu, helped to spur the Reagan administration's shift to a foreign policy based on opposition to "Soviet-sponsored terrorism". They embraced Ronald Reagan and were, in turn, embraced by his administration.

These same neo-conservatives, however, were largely rebuffed by Bush Senior who pursued a more traditional foreign policy agenda, and were relentless foes of the Clinton administration, whose foreign policy was based on multilateral engagement, promotion of trade and the pursuit of negotiated settlements to conflict.

Treatise on foreign policy

Their late 1990s treatise on American foreign and military policy Rebuilding America's Defenses: Strategy, Forces and Resources for a New Century, has now been adopted by the new Bush Administration as The National Security Strategy of the United States of America.

The hallmark of the neo-conservatives thinking has been their belief that the U.S. should project both political and military dominance in the post-Cold War world. It was this that led them to advocate U.S. abandonment of several international agreements and conferences and to press for the largely unilateral war with Iraq.

While much of this has been known, what is new, has been found in articles that explore the intellectual underpinnings of this movement providing insights into their political thinking.

Since a number of key neo-conservatives have studied with the political philosopher Leo Strauss, several researchers have probed the writings of Strauss and other Strauss disciples for clues into the ideas that have shaped the operational side of neo-conservative practice.

From the articles that have appeared, three central notions emerge:
William Pfaff writing in the International Herald Tribune describes Strauss' followers as a "cult", noting that Strauss believed that "essential truth about human society and history should be held by an élite and withheld from others who lack the fortitude to deal with truth".

Another Strauss critic quoted in a lengthy New Yorker piece observes: "Strauss believed that good statesmen… must rely on an inner circle," and notes that this is how the neo-conservatives have come to see themselves.

In this same context, the New Yorker article quotes one neo-conservative who has been in charge of the Defence Department's special intelligence unit who wrote that "deception is the norm in political life".

A few recent articles have also quoted Shadia Drury's book Leo Strauss and the American Right in which she wrote: "Strauss thinks that the political order can only be stable if it is united by an external threat. Following Machiavelli, he maintains that if no external threat exists, then one has to be manufactured…in Strauss' view you have to fight all the time… [this leads to an] 'aggressive belligerent foreign policy'."

Putting all this together, Joshua Jonah Marshall, writing in The Washington Monthly, describes neo-conservative political practice by providing a lesson from their Reagan administration days: "The willingness to deceive - both themselves and others - expanded as neo-cons grew more comfortable with power. Many spent the Reagan years orchestrating bloody wars against Soviet proxies in the Third World."

The nadir of this deceit was their Iran-Contra scandal…

"But the neo-cons did not dwell on what they got wrong. Rather, the experience of having played a hand in the downfall of so great an evil (as the Soviet Union) led them to the opposite belief: that it's okay to be spectacularly wrong, even brazenly deceptive about the details, so long as you have a moral vision and a willingness to use force."

Leading up to war

So much of this resonates with the events that have just unfolded leading up to the Iraq war. What is intriguing is that while that war may have been the neo-conservatives' big victory, their deceits may also contribute to their undoing.

Even if signs of weapons of mass destruction (WMD) are found, it has become increasingly difficult to maintain "immediacy of the threat" posed by the Iraqi regime. And, before the war, the neo-conservatives portrayed the war as the beginning of a "permanent revolution" that, in domino-like fashion, would democratise and transform the entire Middle East.

With the Bush Administration's political strategists now planning for the president's re-election bid, one analyst notes: "There is a lot less enthusiasm for the neo-con crowd." Some in the White House are blaming the neo conservatives and certain figures in the Pentagon for their "inadequate post-war planning" and their drive "to impose a Pax-Americana on the world".

At this time it may be too early to predict how this battle within the Bush Administration will be resolved. But the lessons ab-out neo-conservative thi-nking and practices learned from the last round are invaluable and should be remembered as we go forward.

The writer, president of the Arab American Institute and a Democratic political lobbyist, hosts the weekly radio and television programme 'A Capital View' on the Arab Network of America which is also aired live in the Middle East on MBC. He can be contacted at jzogby@gulfnews.com


 

 
Earth, a planet hungry for peace

 

The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).
The Israeli apartheid (security) wall around Palestinian population centers in the West Bank (Ran Cohen, pmc, 5/24/03).

 

 

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