OpinionJournal
THINKING THINGS OVER
Joining LaRouche
In the Fever Swamps
The New York Times and The New Yorker go off the deep end.
BY ROBERT L. BARTLEY
Monday, June 9, 2003 12:01 a.m. EDT

"Just weeks after the LaRouche in 2004 campaign began nationwide circulation
of 400,000 copies of the Children of Satan dossier, exposing the role of
University of Chicago fascist 'philosopher' Leo Strauss as the godfather of
the neo-conservative war party in and around the Bush Administration, two
major establishment publications have joined the exposé."

So brags an article under the byline Jeffrey Steinberg on Executive
Intelligence Review, a Web site devoted to the perennial presidential
campaign of Lyndon H. LaRouche Jr. This time around, Mr. LaRouche is running
on a platform equating the Sept. 11 attacks on the World Trade Center and
Pentagon with the 1933 Reichstag fire, set by Nazis so they could blame the
Communists and take over the German government.

In his part of "Children of Satan," Mr. Steinberg charges that a "cabal of
Strauss disciples, along with an equally small circle of allied
neo-conservative and Likudnik fellow-travelers" has been hovering around the
government for 30 years, "awaiting the moment of opportunity to launch their
not-so-silent coup."

It does seem to be true that the LaRouche screed was first in line in
thrusting Leo Strauss, author of such volumes as "Natural Right and
History," into the middle of the debate over the Iraq war. The theme was
later sounded by James Atlas in the New York Times and Seymour Hersh in the
New Yorker.

Mr. Atlas's article on "Leo-Cons" included a photo essay with shots of Mr.
Strauss and presumed disciples including Edward Shils, Allan Bloom, Saul
Bellow, Albert Wohlstetter, on to Clarence Thomas and Leon Kass. It ended
with big photos of Richard Perle (along with the howler, later corrected by
the Times, that he was married to Wohlstetter's daughter Joan) and Paul
Wolfowitz.

Mr. Hersh's "Selective Intelligence" basically aired one side of an
intelligence debate, defending dovish (or if you prefer, intellectually
conservative) CIA analysts. It described the other side as "the Straussian
movement," citing Mr. Wolfowitz and Abram Shulsky, head of a special
Pentagon shop set up to review intelligence on Iraq. And it included a quote
from an academic about "Strauss's idea--actually Plato's--that philosophers
need to tell noble lies not only to the people at large but also to powerful
politicians."

Looking at the striking similarities in these accounts the conspiracy-minded
might conclude that the New York Times and New Yorker have been reduced to
recycling the insights of Lyndon LaRouche. But it's entirely possible that
Mr. Atlas and Mr. Hersh have stumbled into the fever swamps all on their
own.

To those of us who have lived this history over the decades, the notion of a
Strauss conspiracy is totally unhinged. Leo Strauss, I learned as graduate
student in the 1960s, was a champion of ancient philosophers, a critic of
attempts at empirical political science if not of modernity itself. While
this is centuries and leagues removed from Saddam Hussein, it's true that
Mr. Strauss did influence Irving Kristol and his wife Gertrude Himmelfarb,
and through them other neo-conservatives.

It happens that I did a lot to put this term on the intellectual map as the
1970s dawned, with profiles of Mr. Kristol and Norman Podhoretz. The "neo"
meant that they were conservative converts from earlier radicalism. I
recently asked Mr. Podhoretz whether his son John and Mr. Kristol's son
William were neo-conservatives. "No!" he answered. "They were to the manner
born."

It also happens that I had a long association with the late Albert
Wohlstetter, who was in fact the key intellect in promoting new defense
policies, in particular the accurate weapons that dominated Iraq, and also
in mentoring Mr. Wolfowitz, Mr. Perle and others. But his background was as
a mathematical logician and advocate of operational research. Despite Mr.
Atlas's ludicrous classification of Wohlstetter as a Straussian, the two had
nothing in common except the University of Chicago campus.

While Mr. Wolfowitz took two courses from Mr. Strauss, he was in fact a
student of Mr. Wohlstetter. He makes all this clear in a remarkable
interview with Sam Tanenhaus of Vanity Fair, released by the defense
department at www.defenselink.mil. The actual article by Mr. Tanenhaus is
only now being widely circulated, but various writers, especially in Europe,
have grasped fourth-hand accounts to charge that Mr. Wolfowitz had admitted
to "deception."

As one of the few people who ran with both neo-conservatives and the
Wohlstetter circle, let me testify that they did not appear at each other's
conferences or dinner tables. But prominent members of each are Jewish. This
is what the recent conspiracy charges are ultimately about.

Sometimes it is overt anti-Semitism; with "Children of Satan," Mr. LaRouche
has chosen an Aryan-nation phrase for Jews (descendants of Cain, who was the
result of Satan seducing Eve, in this perfervid theology). At other times,
often in the hands of accusers who are Jewish themselves, it is a charge of
secret loyalties. The Jews, or Israel, or the Likud have conspired to take
over American foreign policy.

This is the ugly accusation an alert reader should suspect in encountering
the word "Straussian," or these days even "neo-conservative" in the context
of the Iraq debate. Paul Wolfowitz and Richard Perle find their Jewish
heritage a point of attack. But George Bush, Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld
are gentiles. Condoleezza Rice and Colin Powell don't look Jewish to me, but
they also helped draft the basic statement of the Bush Doctrine, the
September 2002 "National Security Policy of the United States."

Clearly, the administration's critics are anxious to seize any straw to
discredit its success in Iraq, to leap to the worst possible construction of
events. It was a "quagmire" when troops were slowed by a sand storm, now
it's "deception" because chemical weapons dumps haven't been found. The
impulse is so strong that Leo Strauss gets exhumed, words are twisted from
their meaning, and the Times and New Yorker make common cause with Lyndon
LaRouche.

Mr. Bartley is editor emeritus of The Wall Street Journal. His column
appears Mondays in the Journal and on OpinionJournal.com.

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