http://www.thenation.com/doc/20070827/pollitt

subject to debate by Katha Pollitt
Who's Sorry Now?

[from the August 27, 2007 issue]

In the months leading up to the invasion of Iraq, there was no more
effective intellectual spokesperson for war than then-Harvard
professor Michael Ignatieff. Not for him the contemptuous brawling of
Christopher Hitchens or the smooth triumphalism of William Kristol.
Pained, sensitive, with the star professor's gift of seeming to
wrestle with his thoughts right there in front of you, Ignatieff made
the case for war as a humanitarian and human-rights mission: We had to
save the Iraqis from Saddam. For supporters of democracy and idealists
of all stripes, this was a very persuasive argument.

Four years, four months and seventeen days after bombs began falling
on Baghdad, Ignatieff, who left Harvard to become deputy leader of
Canada's Liberal Party, has finally joined the long parade of prowar
commentators who've publicly acknowledged their mistake. On August 5
The New York Times Magazine carried his long, woolly, pompous
pseudo-confession "Getting Iraq Wrong: What the War Has Taught Me
About Political Judgment." Wandering among references to Isaiah
Berlin, Churchill, Roosevelt, de Gaulle, Beckett, Burke and Kant,
Ignatieff distinguishes between the experimental, enthusiastic mindset
natural to academics (himself then) and the "good judgment" and
"prudence" required of political leaders (himself now). He thought
politics was about all that high-minded stuff he taught at Harvard and
let himself get carried away by his sympathy for Iraqi exiles. In
other words, Michael Ignatieff supported the war because he was just
too smart and too good for this fallen world.

Never mind that most academics opposed the war, especially if they
actually knew something about the Middle East and were foreign policy
"realists," like Ignatieff's peers Stephen Walt and John Mearsheimer.
Once, just once, I'd like to see a repentant war proponent acknowledge
in a straightforward, non-weaselly way that Howard Zinn, Noam Chomsky,
Scott Ritter, Code Pink and, yes, The Nation--to say nothing of the
millions around the world who demonstrated so ardently against the
war--got it right. But no: "Many of those who correctly anticipated
catastrophe did so not by exercising judgment but by indulging in
ideology," Ignatieff writes. "They opposed the invasion because they
believed the President was only after the oil or because they believed
America is always and in every situation wrong."

Excuse me while I set myself on fire. I remember the run-up to the
invasion very well, and "It's all about oil" and "America is always
wrong" were hardly the major arguments on the table. Since Ignatieff
must know this--surely he listened to Mark Danner and Robert Scheer
when he teamed with Hitchens to debate them at UCLA--his calumny is
not only self-serving, it's disingenuous.

Let's review. You wouldn't know it from Ignatieff's piece, but Bush's
stated reason for war was not the liberation of the Iraqi people; it
was that Saddam Hussein promoted terrorism, colluded with Al Qaeda,
possessed WMDs and presented an immediate threat to the United States.
Long before the war there was quite a bit of evidence that none of
this was true. Were Hans Blix and Mohammed ElBaradei ideologues who
hated America? Remember the yellowcake, the aluminum tubes, the Niger
documents the International Atomic Energy Agency determined were
forgeries? It was possible to say, and many did, that Saddam was a
murderous tyrant but that unilateral pre-emptive war against a country
that presented no threat was a dangerous upending of settled
international law.

Other excellent reasons for opposing the war:

Fear of humanitarian disaster. True, catastrophe didn't come entirely
or right away in the form anti-war commentators feared--hand-to-hand
combat in the streets of Baghdad, displaced millions, famine, civil
war, a spreading regional conflict. Still, whose prediction is closer
to today's reality: those like Ignatieff, who saw a brief war followed
by democracy and prosperity under the auspices of Ahmad Chalabi, or
those, despised at the time as Chicken Littles, who saw invasion
unleashing mayhem and ruin and displacement?

Why Saddam? Saddam was an evil dictator, but Iraq was not the world's
only human-rights basket case. What about Iran, North Korea, Sudan,
Saudi Arabia, Zimbabwe, Congo, Burma? What about the Russians in
Chechnya and the Chinese in Tibet? A lot of people just didn't believe
we were invading Iraq either to bring democracy or to protect
ourselves from terrorism. They noted that invading Iraq was on the
neocon agenda long before 9/11. They thought the real rationale for
war had to be something else--setting up bases in Iraq, or protecting
Israel or, yes, controlling the oil. We may never know the real
motives for the war, but why is it "ideological" to suspect that
securing the world's most important resource was somewhere in the mix?

Low odds of success. At NYU a few weeks before the war, exiled Iraqi
writer Kanan Makiya gave a prowar speech so moving it made die-hard
opponents of invasion feel like heartless cowards. But even he
admitted that the odds of success were only 5 percent; there were
nineteen chances in twenty that the invasion would go horribly wrong.
A lot of people who might have supported the war if they believed it
would be quick and easy--as, at the time, the occupation of
Afghanistan seemed to be--opposed it because it looked too uncertain,
too dangerous, too much like Vietnam.

Distrust of Bush, Cheney and the neocons. Ignatieff doesn't even
mention the makers of the war until the end of his article, and then
only to note Bush's simplistic reliance on the rightness of his
motives. But lots of people just didn't believe the Administration's
evidence or trust its stated reasons. As with the 2000 election, they
smelled a rat. I remember thinking, Why do we have to do this right
now? Because the troops are there and soon it will be too hot didn't
seem like a good answer. The neocons actually fit Ignatieff's
caricature of fantasizing, deluded intellectuals pretty well. This
time, he and the ideologues were on the same side.

For good judgment and prudence--to say nothing of realism and
intellectual modesty--the opponents of invasion win hands down. It
would be nice if the mainstream media acknowledged that.
--
Jim Devine / "Segui il tuo corso, e lascia dir le genti." (Go your own
way and let people talk.) --  Karl, paraphrasing Dante.

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