Some light, I think, may be cast upon the criticisms of
President Bush’s State of the Union address last week by something
said in Senator Jim Webb’s reply to it for Democrats. It was no
news, of course, that the Senator thought the war in Iraq
“mismanaged,” though his only instance of mismanagement (if that
was what it was) was the fact that it has lasted for four years.
Instead of either explaining what he meant or offering any
suggestions for properly managing the war, he said instead that
“many, including myself, warned even before the war began that it
was unnecessary, that it would take our energy and attention away
from the larger war against terrorism, and that invading and
occupying Iraq would leave us strategically vulnerable in the most
violent and turbulent corner of the world.”
How’s that? Strategically vulnerable? How do Iraqis
blowing each other up make us strategically vulnerable? Never mind.
What we were meant to take away from the Senator’s pronouncement on
the President’s foreign policy was only that he, Senator Webb, had
been right and President Bush had been wrong. I
think the matter is a fair bit more complex than this, but let us
allow the oversimplification. The President has been wrong; the
Senator has been right. Of how much importance should this fact be
to anyone but the Senator himself? What does it tell us about
anything that his audience — presumably those who are interested
in public policy and its outcomes — might care about except that
the Senator has a good deal of vanity about his own intellect and
perspicacity? It’s as if he thought that the country’s concerns
about Iraq were mainly to get on record who was right about it and
who was wrong.
It’s a typical bit of baby-boomer narcissism, of the same sort
that you see in the “Not in my name” peace marchers. The most
effective line of opposition they can think of to take to something
they don’t agree with is that, well, they don’t agree with
it. So, too, Senator Webb thinks that he has said all he needs to
say about the difficult situation his country finds itself in once
he has said who was wrong and who was right — the latter including
not only himself but those whose “warnings” the President has
“disregarded,” among them “the national security adviser during the
first Gulf War, the chief of staff of the army, two former
commanding generals of the Central Command, whose jurisdiction
includes Iraq, the director of operations on the Joint Chiefs of
Staff, and many, many others with great integrity and long
experience in national security affairs.”
So, then, there were no “warnings” on the other side? Or
perhaps, those whose advice the President did listen to
were not men (or possibly women) of “great integrity and long
experience in national security affairs”? He doesn’t say that, of
course. Only that the supposed “disarray” in Iraq was “predictable
— and predicted.” Well, anything is predictable once it is
predicted, but a wise man — which few would accuse Senator Webb of
being — might pause before staking his entire claim to credibility
on his having been right, once, in a prediction. He who is right
today may easily be wrong tomorrow. These are complex matters and
the decisions they call on us to make are seldom obvious ones.
Events will always prove some decision-makers wrong and some right,
with no very great shame to the former or glory to the latter. I’d
have thought that there was a lot more glory in having made a wrong
decision and then done all that you could to recover from it.
Anyway, it seems to me but a poor satisfaction for those would
have made different decisions — or, in the case of the Democratic
senators who voted for the war in Iraq, even many who actually made
the same decision — to spend much time congratulating themselves.
It is an even poorer one if the self-congratulation takes the place
of any serious proposal as to what can be done to get one’s country
out of the “disarray” — if that is what it is — that it finds
itself in. Mr Webb may think, as many Democrats and those in the
media do, that he was right because he is brighter than President
Bush, but anyone without that kind of vanity at stake would be more
careful about claiming intellectual superiority in an area so
fraught with difficulties, where even the cleverest — “the best
and brightest” as it used to be said about the Kennedy-Johnson
administration that got us into Vietnam — can go wrong.
I wonder, too, if the politics of personal validation and
authenticity that Senator Webb is so keen on could have anything to
do with the fact that, as Charles Krauthammer says, “our debates about oil consumption, energy
dependence and global warming are not meant to be serious. They are
meant for show.” It certainly has to do with the resolution of
disapproval of the “surge” in Iraq that Congress is busy preparing.
As we might almost have expected, when Senator Biden said of the
resolution he was pushing that “This is not designed to say, ‘Mr.
President, ah-ha, you’re wrong’, ” it meant that that was
precisely what it was designed to say. There was no other
point to it.
Compare, too, the criticism the President has come under for not
mentioning Katrina, or New Orleans, in his address. Such a mention
would not do anything for those who are still hurricane-ravaged,
but it would make a claim to “compassion” and, hence, the same kind
of personal authenticity that seems to be the only current
political coin. That’s the crazy world we live in, I’m afraid, but
it may be time for us to take a lesson from Rick of
Casablanca who said, as you may remember, “I’m no good at
being noble, but it doesn’t take much to see that the problems” —
or, indeed, the petty glories — “of three little people don’t
amount to a hill of beans in this crazy world. Someday you’ll
understand that.” I wish I could believe that some day Jim Webb
would understand it.