Ross Douthat picks up on a theme I explored
in a column last month: the intraconservative foreign policy
debate, as personified by Rand Paul and Marco Rubio. He writes:
Rubio is the great neoconservative hope, the champion of a
foreign policy that boldly goes abroad in search of monsters to
destroy. In the Senate, he’s constantly pressed for a more hawkish
line against the Mideast’s bad actors. His maiden Senate speech was
a paean to national greatness, whose peroration invoked John F.
Kennedy and insisted that America remain the “watchman on the wall
of world freedom.”
Paul, on the other hand, has smoothed the crankish edges off his
famous father’s antiwar conservatism, reframing it in the language
of constitutionalism, the national interest and the budget
deficit… In a recent address at the Johns Hopkins School of
Advanced International Studies, Paul presented himself as the real
foreign-policy “moderate” - neither an isolationist nor a Wilsonian
idealist, but someone who believes we should be “somewhere some of
the time” without trying to be “everything to everyone.”
Even this moderate dissent from hyperinterventionism is too much
for John McCain, who
denounced the Republican presidential field as “isolationist”
for what were, aside from Ron Paul, fairly mild criticisms of the
Obama administration’s policies in Afghanistan and Libya.
But that’s exactly what bothers McCain. Under Bush, Republican
skepticism of war would have been confined to Paul and a few other
outliers. Now it is creeping into the mainstream of the GOP,
reviving, as I wrote
last week, a debate that broke out during the 1990s. Douthat
concludes his piece by discussing Rubio’s “story of a great
republic armed and righteous, with no limits on what it can
accomplish in the world.”
“This is a story that many conservatives - and many Americans -
want to believe. Once, I believed it myself,” Douthat writes. “But
that was many years and many wars ago, and now I think Rand Paul is
right.” Douthat isn’t alone.