By Mark Goldblatt on 3.10.05 @ 12:03AM
Pronounce, publish, and perish in the New York Times Book Review.
Certainty is sometimes a transient thing -- as three prominent
liberal commentators might have been reminded last Sunday, when the
New York Times Book Review published highlights of their
roundtable discussion on the future of liberalism in America. The
discussion, which featured Peter Beinart, editor of the New
Republic, Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of the
Nation, and Michael Tomasky, executive editor of the
American Prospect, took place on January 21, a week before
the Iraqi elections, just as terrorists led by Abu Musab al-Zarqawi
were ratcheting up their homicidal mayhem. So when the topic of
Iraq came up, the roundtable participants had no qualms writing off
the entire invasion as an unmitigated disaster:
"There is no question that the war is going very, very badly,"
declared Beinart.
"In the context of the war on terror, Iraq was an act of
self-sabotage," declared vanden Heuvel.
"I think the war in Iraq was a catastrophic mistake," declared
Tomasky.
Six weeks later, the Islamic world is undergoing seismic changes
the likes of which have not been witnessed in more than half a
century: First came free and fair elections in Iraq -- with a
turnout, even in the face of deadly violence, of around 60 percent
of eligible voters. The Iraqi elections were followed, in rapid
succession, by the first tentative steps towards democratic reform
in Saudi Arabia and Egypt, the renewal of peace negotiations
between Israel and the Palestinians, and the promise to pull out of
Lebanon by Syria.
All of the above can be attributed, in whole or in part, to
George W. Bush's determination to end Saddam Hussein's maniacal
reign in Iraq. Add to that list what was already known when the
liberal roundtable gathered: the December 2003 decision of Libya's
Muammar Qaddafi to abandon his pursuit of weapons of mass
destruction and submit to United Nations weapons inspections, and
January 10, 2005 election of Mahmoud Abbas, a popular moderate, as
president of the Palestinian Authority.
I wonder if Beinart, vanden Heuvel and Tomasky are quite as
certain today as they were six weeks ago.
topics:
Islam, Iraq, Israel, United Nations