The American Spectator

home
ADVERTISEMENT
Print Email
Text Size

The Spectacle Blog

Schrodinger's War

A few days ago Jonah Goldberg wrote in the LA Times that "the Iraq war was a mistake by the most obvious criteria: If we had known then what we know now, we would never have gone to war with Iraq in 2003." But then at the end of his column, he wrote that "if we can finish the job, the war won't be remembered as a mistake." This struck me immediately as a paradoxical analysis. Is it really meaningful to say that the war is a mistake now while conceding that it might not seem like a mistake later?

Jeff Jacoby, responding to Goldberg in the Boston Globe, notes several wars that might have looked like a mistake in the heat of battle, but not like a mistake in retrospect. Perhaps, like the cat that seems to be both dead and alive until its state is observed, the war is both a mistake and not a mistake until we can actually look back on it.

(Of course, it's not even that simple; historians often continue to argue about wars decades and even centuries later.)

topics:
Iraq

Leave a comment

Leave a Comment

N.B. We encourage readers to share and discuss their thoughtful and relevant comments about this Spectator article. Comments are routinely monitored and will be deleted if profane, bigoted, or grossly impolite. Please be respectful. (And don't feed the trolls!) Thank you.

Related Blog Posts

More Blog Posts by John Tabin

http://spectator.org/blog/2006/10/23/schrodingers-war

ADVERTISEMENT

SPONSORED LINKS

Special Feature

Better that we become a nation of choosers rather than beggars. Our symposium on choice from the May, 2012 issue:

A Time for Choosing

James Piereson

The Road from Serfdom

Stephen Moore and Peter Ferrara

FLASHBACK TO: 1984

Clip of the Day

Most Popular Articles

Meet the Flukes!

F. H. Buckley | 5.25.12

The Wisconsin Turning Point

Peter Ferrara | 5.23.12

In Search of Muhammad

Aymenn Jawad Al-Tamimi | 5.25.12

Age and Kyl

Quin Hillyer | 5.25.12

Follow Me

Jay D. Homnick | 5.25.12

A Test of National Honor

Hal G.P. Colebatch | 5.25.12

How About the Record of DOE Capital?

William Tucker | 5.25.12

The Great Debate

R. Emmett Tyrrell, Jr. | 5.24.12

ADVERTISEMENT