Bill
Kauffman will be at Cato Institute on Thursday to talk about
his new book,
Ain't My America: The Long, Noble History of Antiwar Conservatism
and Middle-American Anti-Imperialism.
Kauffman is a charming writer whose brand of small-town Burkean
conservatism gives him an unusual perspective on current politics.
I enjoyed his book
With Good Intentions? Reflections on the Myth of Progress in
American. However, the title of his new book is a bit
off-putting. I just don't like the phrase "anti-war," for the
simple reason that I don't think any sane person can be "pro-war,"
at least not in a general sense.
War is a dreadful thing to be avoided if possible, but it is not
always possible to avoid it. The history of the 20th century
teaches that outright pacifism -- such as flourished in England and
France after World War I -- can be an incitement to aggression. If
France had been willing to fight a small war when Hitler
re-militarized the Rhineland, they could have avoided the big war
they eventually got.
Of course, most of Kauffman's readers are likely to see his new
book through the prism of Iraq, an issue where I think the schism
among conservatives is much deeper than has been generally
recognized.
topics:
Iraq, Conservatism