It appeared in the April 1 edition, but otherwise there was no
reason to think David Leonhardt’s New York Times column
was a joke. It was, however, a shock:
In the summer of 1933, just as they will do on Thursday, heads
of government and their finance ministers met in London to talk
about a global economic crisis. They accomplished little and went
home to battle the crisis in their own ways. More than any other
country, Germany—Nazi Germany—then set out on a serious stimulus
program. The government built up the military, expanded the
autobahn, put up stadiums for the 1936 Berlin Olympics and built
monuments to the Nazi Party across Munich and Berlin. The economic
benefits of this vast works program never flowed to most workers,
because fascism doesn’t look kindly on collective bargaining. But
Germany did escape the Great Depression faster than other
countries.
An obvious rejoinder is that Germany also began mobilizing for
war “faster than other countries.” But Leonhardt saw a positive
lesson in the Nazi experience: “Stimulus works.”
This argument is remarkable not because of its merit or lack
thereof, but because it appeared in print at all. Not long ago it
was considered terribly insensitive to praise anything about the
Nazi regime. To do so was seen as countenancing or even denying the
Holocaust. Leonhardt, well aware of this erstwhile taboo, opened
his column by acknowledging that his analogy was “uncomfortable”
and “a little distracting.” Later he observed that “no sane person
enjoys mixing nuance and Nazis”—not that this stopped him.
The weakening of this taboo is not necessarily an outrage. One
ought to be able to take for granted that the Holocaust was a
singular evil while considering other aspects of the Nazi regime in
a detached manner. But the recent writings of a colleague of
Leonhardt’s cast a more troubling light on the Times’s
changing attitudes toward Nazism.
Roger Cohen, who writes for the Times op-ed page, has
produced a series of apologias for the Islamic Republic of Iran—a
regime whose rulers do deny the Holocaust while at the
same time proclaiming their ambition to repeat it. In 2005 Iran’s
president, Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, infamously said that Israel “must
be wiped out from the map of the world.” To be sure, Cohen
disapproves of such threats. But he disapproves far more strongly
of those who take them seriously.
In February, Cohen visited Iran, where he interviewed a handful
of Jewish citizens. (Iran’s Jewish population is estimated at
25,000, down 75 percent since the 1979 Islamic revolution.) He
found that Iran’s Jews lead a life of “relative tranquility” and
approve of the ayatollahs’ rule. A synagogue in Iran’s
third-largest city displayed a banner reading “Congratulations on
the 30th anniversary of the Islamic Revolution from the Jewish
community of Esfahan.” One Iranian Jew told Cohen he believes
Israel is “criminal.”
Although Cohen is probably in no danger of winning a Pulitzer,
this performance was worthy of Walter Duranty, the notorious
Times correspondent whose dispatches from 1930s Moscow
included such classics as “Russians Hungry, but Not Starving,” “Red
Army Is Held No Menace to Peace,” and “Stalinism Solving Minorities
Problem.” The Cohen column prompted much fierce and devastating
commentary (including from my column on the WallStreet Journal’s website). That criticism got under
Cohen’s skin, and he devoted a second column, in early March, to
answering it.
Cohen was particularly irked by “American Jews unable to resist
some analogy between Iran and Nazi Germany.” Ordinarily, a
comparison to Nazi Germany is a crude way of denouncing an opponent
or his position: Barack Obama is a great orator;Hitler was a great orator, too.Canadauses
the metricsystem; NaziGermanyused the
metric system, too. This is almost always a logical fallacy,
known informally as the argumentum reductio ad Hitlerum:
falsely imputing evil to one’s opponent by means of an irrelevant
Nazi comparison.
Yet if ever such an analogy is appropriate, it is in this case.
Iran’s rulers not only have expressed the desire to exterminate
Israel’s six million Jews, but they are also seeking the means to
do so in the form of a nuclear weapon. Cohen evaded this obvious
point. Instead he argued that “Iran’s Islamic Republic is no Third
Reich redux” because “Iran has not waged an expansionary war in
more than two centuries,” because Iran’s regime does not “require
the complete subservience of the individual to the state,” and even
because the regime does not operate with “trains-on-time Fascist
efficiency.”
This is the precise inverse of the usual reductio ad Hitlerum.
Cohen is falsely diminishing the Iranian regime’s evil by
dwelling on irrelevant differences with Nazi Germany. His
observation that Iran lacks “Fascist efficiency” is especially
telling in this regard, and it makes Leonhardt’s praise for such
efficiency seem all the creepier. Iran’s inefficiency not only is
morally irrelevant but has diminishing practical importance. The
possession of nuclear weapons makes it possible to commit murder on
a Hitlerian scale without anything approaching Germanic
competence.
IN AN APRIL COLUMN, Cohen finally addressed the Iranian nuclear
threat—by dismissing it as an Israeli fabrication. Previous Israeli
leaders predicted that Iran would acquire the bomb by 1999 or 2004,
and this did not happen. Therefore, Cohen reasoned, Israel is
“crying wolf.” Never mind that the last time the boy in the fable
cries wolf, there is a wolf.
Never mind, either, that the U.S. government (under Presidents
Clinton and Obama as well as Bush), America’s European allies, the
International Atomic Energy Agency, and to some extent the
governments of Russia, China, and some Arab countries have all
taken Iran’s nuclear ambitions seriously. Apparently the Israelis
have managed to fool everyoneexcept Roger Cohen
into believing a threat they know is phony.
But if the Israelis are lying when they say Iran is a threat to
them, the Iranians are telling the same lie when they issue threats
against Israel. Why? According to Cohen, Iran’s rulers are
motivated by a concern for peace, human rights, and
nonproliferation. I am not kidding. He actually published the
following words:
One way to look at Iran’s scurrilous anti-Israel tirades is as a
provocation to focus people on Israel’s bomb, its 41-year
occupation of the West Bank, its Hamas denial, its repetitive use
of overwhelming force.
Alan Brooks| 6.22.09 @ 8:32AM
yeah, well Stalin's serfs benefited from his 1930s 'stimulus' plans, too.