On 14 Feb 2023, at 4:48, Michael Guggenheim wrote:

> I sent an email to NLR alerting them to this quote. Maybe I was not the only 
> one. I was hoping, and suggesting, they would add a comment to D’Eramo’s 
> text, explaining who Ganser is, and maybe asking D’Eramo to explain to the 
> reader why he included the passage. Instead they deleted it, without leaving 
> a note as to the alteration of the text.
>
> I understand that the editors of NLR may not know who Ganser is, and that 
> they cannot be expected to check every reference in every text.

Michael, I appreciate your conciliatory gesture here, but they *can* be 
expected to do exactly that. Not every reference, you're right: for mentions of 
some arcane scholarly debates about Jane Austen or whatever, no. But D'Eramo's 
piece is a broadside in a debate where counter/charges of antisemitism are rife 
all around. The piece has only a handful of references — to Financial Times, to 
Foreign Policy, and to a well-known, decade-old book by an established Oxbridge 
historian. It's running in a journal in the UK, where the Labour Party has been 
riven with accusations of baked-in antisemitism. And, as you note, it's an ad 
for a book with a recent publication date and a title that couldn't be more 
blunt: D'Eramo's own words were "Daniele Ganser’s 2022 book _NATO’s Illegal 
Wars_." This is *exactly* the kind of situation where an editor should check 
that one, odd reference.

For ref, here's a screenshot of the D'Eramo piece before and after, side by 
side:

        https://tldr.nettime.org/@tb/109863202886355396

Checking D'Eramo's reference took a few minutes: Ganser > amazon[dot]de > title 
> publisher (Westend) > author bio > link to his "Swiss Institute for Peace and 
Energy Research." And what did I find? The lead story on SIPER's site is about 
the "9/11 debate," which claims "WTC7 was blown up, says the Hulsey study from 
2019. The history of the terrorist attacks must be rewritten." Uh, OK.

Here's my take as an editor: In a journal a closing paragraph should distill 
what needs to be said. In D'Eramo's piece, the ( ) around the Ganser reference 
mean *by definition* this doesn't need to be said. They got there one of two 
ways: either (1) D'Eramo included them, in which case the editor should have 
said nope, cut it, or (2) NLR's editor *did* take it up with D'Eramo but gave 
in, then added them. My $5 says (2) is what happened, but it doesn't matter 
because NLR's later decision to cut the reference without comment works equally 
well with both.

Since D'Eramo likes to cast his argument in terms of US militarism, here's 
another: When Clark Clifford, the famously fastidious adviser to decades of US 
presidents, got caught up in the BCCI scandal, he said, "I have a choice of 
either seeming stupid or venal." (I was working on the book where he said that 
while the scandal was breaking and I proposed a draft for that footnote — but 
not that wording, which became a sort of ur-meme in East Coast power-corridor 
circles.) That more or less sums up the NLR's predicament here: compromised or 
stupid — or maybe both.

This 'forensicky' micro-stuff is ridiculous, but for one thing: It suggests 
that NLR still has at least one foot stuck in the muck of tankie horseshoe 
nonsense. They aren't alone. In the US, The Nation does too, as Duncan Campbell 
recently documented in gruesome detail for a less rump-y UK left outlet, Byline 
Times:

        
https://bylinetimes.com/2023/02/04/russia-and-the-us-press-the-article-the-cjr-didnt-publish/

Bigger picture: D'Eramo's list of weaponry — which, after all, is why Brian 
cited the article to begin with — is the kind of crude "Soviet tank-counting 
exercise" I would have expected from the Brookings Institution in the mid-'80s. 
And that's basically D'Eramo's argument, isn't it? But for a war that's almost 
universally seen as inaugurating a radically new era of conflict — drones — 
that kind of 'untimely' analysis is itself plainly nostalgic. That says a lot 
about the school of thought D'Eramo follows: rather than face the future, it 
faces the past. There are lots of reasons to be pessimistic, but people who 
actively and explicitly embrace the past so they reduce the present to known 
categories aren't likely to find much room for optimism, are they?

This is one of the main problems that dogs so much establishment leftism now. 
The other is a categorical rejection of the use of force to achieve  their 
political ends, a leftover of the excesses of the hard left of the late '60s / 
early '70s, which the chronically culturalist 'new new left' shares, 
unfortunately. It's not that force is good, right, or even acceptable; rather, 
it's that rejecting force as such concedes it to the right, whose vanguard is 
happily embracing *violence*. Ultimately, if the left wants to achieve more 
than a sort of meta-NIMBYism, it'll need to get its shit together in terms of 
its attitude toward the state. A 'lite' anarchism everywhere all at once 
approach was always a pipe dream, but in the current technological climate it's 
*really* a know-nothing dead-end.

I used specialize in books about postwar US mil/intel activities, which 
involved spending too much time in archives that documented those worlds in 
gruesome detail — and I nearly went into forensic anthropology as a way to cope 
with what I learned. So I'm under no illusions about the presumptive goodness 
of the US or the horrors of war. Even so, I somehow managed to avoid falling 
for the idea (if it even deserves that name) that we can sidestep historical 
analysis of Russian imperialism by reflexively pivoting to solipsistic 
criticisms of "the West" is — plainly — the worst kind of whataboutism.

FWIW, here's what I said almost a year ago to the day, when someone sent yet 
another NLR lopsided broadside to nettime — that one by Wolfgang Streek:

        https://nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-2203/msg00115.html

The lack of word wrapping in that email makes it almost impossible to read on 
the web, unfortunately, but I think it stand up well so maybe just 
cut-and-paste it into something else.

Cheers,
Ted
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