Tuesday, December 02, 2008

Neocons love Obama. posted by "lenin" [Richard Seymour]
from http://leninology.blogspot.com/2008/12/neocons-love-obama.html

"Conservatives should be cheering right now" - David Horowitz (Frontpagemag)

"I would say his administration already far exceeds expectations, and
he hasn't even taken office yet." - Max Boot (Jeane J. Kirkpatrick
Senior Fellow for National Security Studies at CFR)

The neocons are in perfect tizzy over Obama's new administration. To
be fair, this isn't completely new. Some neocons started to love Obama
up long ago, back when Robert Kagan hailed 'Obama the
interventionist'. Senior neoconservative Ken Adelman backed Obama for
his 'temperament' and 'judgment'. Fukuyama, though not exactly a
neocon any longer, went for Obama back in October. Hitchens, who was
only ever a neocon in spirit (ie, drenched in spirit), ditto.

What does all this mean? Are the neocons simply swallowing mouthfuls
of blood and running home to Dad? Or do they have something to be
cheerful about? Actually, it's both. After all, the last time the
neocons were so directionless and lost as a tendency was in the early
1990s, when the 'totalitarian' behemoth they said could never collapse
from within duly collapsed from within. A great many of them initially
supported Bill Clinton, who also appointed a Republican defense
secretary and ran a hawkish foreign policy campaign. The neocons were
in essence liberal nationalists, after all. They had broken with the
Democratic Party after its failure to select Daniel Patrick Moynihan
as their preferred presidential candidate, deriding the centre-right
Carter administration as a 'New Left' one. The main issues that
brought them to the Republican Party were Carter's failure to
decisively support the Shah, and his occasional criticisms of the
Somoza regime and eventual imposition of sanctions. That was
essentially why they turned to the Reaganauts.

And so aside from those who were obsessed with restoring the cultural
values of the 1950s (Kristol, Himmelfarb, Gingrich, Quayle), a
rapprochement with official liberalism made sense. And Clinton went to
some lengths to woo the neoconservatives, successfully getting Richard
Schifter to resign the Bush administration and advise his campaign on
foreign policy in April 1992. Joshua Muravchik also advised the 1992
Clinton campaign on foreign policy, during which time he may have had
some role in persuading Clinton to campaign to the right of Bush the
Elder on the issue of relations with China (although he was obliged to
pursue a quite different course once in office, just as Bush the
Younger has ended up making nice with North Korea). On a whole range
of issues, Clinton advocated a 'human rights' imperialism that he said
Bush Sr. had been remiss on, particularly in the Balkans. It was even
hinted in private that he might be open to an attack on Iraq. And of
course, when Bush applied financial pressure on Israel to get it
involved in peace negotiations, furious neocons could read about
Clinton accusing Bush of "ever so subtly" eroding "the taboo against
overt anti-Semitism". The resulting swoons from some neocon pundits
induced The New Republic to announce: "Neocons for Clinton: They're
Back!" Long after the neocons fell out with the Clinton
administration, Norman Podhoretz still declared himself astonished
that the GOP's formal position on foreign policy was much less hawkish
than Clinton's practise. This is an important point about the neocons
that liberal critics often miss: far from being a bunch of doctrinaire
fanatics, they are far more successful bipartisan operators than any
other political tendency in the United States. (See chapter three of
[his book] 'Liberal Defense' [of Murder] for background).

One intriguing novelty is that the traditional neocon disdain for
realism is not at all to the fore here. Rather, there seems to be some
relief that Obama is has constructed a 'Realpolitik' cabinet rather
than a liberal one. But not much else about this is new.

-- 
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) -- Karl, paraphrasing Dante.
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to