By David Hogberg on 9.16.03 @ 12:01AM
In the view of the neo-pinkos, the War on Terror is not really a struggle against Islamofascism.
If it is possible to be both obtuse and enlightening at the same
time, then the New York Times op-ed page was just that
last Thursday.
The Times' 9/11 anniversary editorial
was followed by an editorial
with a bit of moral equivalence so typical of, well, the New
York Times:
In the United States, Sept. 11 will forever be a day to
remember our victims of terrorism. Yet our nation's hands have not
always been clean, and it is important to recall Chile's Sept. 11,
too. "The Pinochet File," a new book by Peter Kornbluh, a
researcher at the nonprofit National Security Archive, presents
declassified documents showing that the Nixon administration, which
had tried to block Mr. Allende's inauguration, began plotting to
bring him down just 72 hours after he took office.
Why drag this out only two years after 9/11? Maybe it was
because it was the 30th Anniversary of the Pinochet coup? More
likely, it is supposed historical evidence that the U.S. has been a
bully in international affairs, and a subtle implication that under
the Bush Administration we are now reprising that role.
In addition to the moral cluelessness, the Times
displayed the obligatory condescension in the main editorial:
…we have also seen, in the past two years, a
regrettable narrowing of our idea of patriotism. It has become, for
some people in some ways, a more brittle expression of national
sentiment -- a blind statement of faith that does more to divide
Americans from one another than to join them together.
We need to fear and temper that kind of rigidity. It is not
the least bit unpatriotic to question some of the arguments that
led to war in Iraq. No national purpose is served by losing our
sense of political and historical discrimination in an upwelling of
patriotic fervor. Much as it may seem logical that the horror of
the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, is inextricably linked to the other
terrorist horrors around the world, the fact is that the
connections are not all clear. The final answers must be as the
evidence -- not political will -- determines.
As I have noted
before,
very few on the right have questioned the patriotism of those who
opposed the Iraq War. Indeed, the claim by those on the left that
their patriotism is being questioned is little more than a lame
attempt to gain the moral high ground by portraying themselves as
victims. The bigger implication in that passage is those who
supported the Iraq War had no logical arguments, but were blinded
by patriotism. That's one of the oldest rhetorical tricks in the
book: when you lose an argument, portray the prevailing side as
based on little more than emotion.
What is most telling in that passage is the sentence "Much as it
may seem logical that the horror of Sept. 11, 2001, is inextricably
linked to other terrorist horrors around the world, the fact is
that the connections are not at all clear." Apparently, the
Times editorialists don't think that 9/11 has any broader
foreign policy implications beyond dismantling al Qaeda. In other
words, the War on Terrorism is not really a struggle against
Islamofascism. If one believes this is not a war against
Islamofascism, then there is no need for any military action after
the Afghanistan campaign.
Although this seems a little surprising, the fact is the
Times opposed broad military action from the very
beginning. On Thursday, the op-ed page also displayed two
editorials from September 12, 2001. After implicitly criticizing
the Clinton administration's approach to striking back at
terrorists, the Times editorialists wrote:
When retaliation is warranted, as it will be in this case
once the organizers have been identified, Washington needs light
but lethal weapons to attack terrorist compounds in remote
locations. Cruise missiles can be effective, but even more accurate
weapons may be needed that can be used in coordination with
enhanced intelligence information.
And
We suffer from an act of war without any enemy nation with
which to do battle. The same media that brought us the pictures of
a collapsing World Trade Center shows us the civilians who live in
the same places that terrorists may dwell, whose lives are just as
ordinary and just as precious as the one that we have
lost.
Even then, only one day after thousands of Americans were
slaughtered in their own backyard, the Times editorialists
were already focused on people in other nations. They were already
showing that they had no stomach for broad military campaigns.
Broad military campaigns would return us to the days of the U.S.
being a bully in foreign affairs, and result in the tragedies that
are the consequence of such campaigns. Much better to use pinprick
strikes that send a missile into a $10 tent to smack some camel in
the butt.
The problem with this type of thinking is that one cannot
simultaneously be against future 9/11's and be against broad U.S.
military campaigns in general. It is not just al Qaeda that would
plan another terrorist attack on the U.S. Other adherents of
radical Islam will scheme to harm us, unless we root them out. To
do that we must eliminate the regimes that enable them, and that
requires large-scale military campaigns.
Yet the Times and others on the left can't see fit to
support the "bully" in the international community. In the future
we can expect that the Times and their ideological ilk
will oppose all major military actions even if the targets are
"inextricably linked" to al Qaeda. Nine-eleven was supposed to be
the day that changed everything. Everything, except the left's
knee-jerk opposition to war.
topics:
Foreign Policy, Trade, Islam, Military, Iraq, Fascism