It is said that there are no atheists in foxholes. It is also clear
from the collective wartime contribution of the War Party that there
are no neoconservatives in foxholes either. Fighting the wars they
agitate for is a task for the "great unwashed," not the Philosopher-Kings
of neoconservatism. Perhaps this is why the neoconservatives are more
concerned about the porous borders in Iraq than in the United States.
Perpetual wars need perpetual sources of men, and is there any better
source of cannon fodder for America's wars than her own porous borders?
Whilst
neoconservatism may owe its neo-Jacobin impulses of "global democratic
revolution" to the Trotskyite pedigree of many of its principal ideologues,
it owes much of its core political philosophy to Professor Leo Strauss.
Strauss moved to America from Germany in 1938 on the suggestion of
the Nazi legal theorist Carl Schmitt, taking up residence at the University
of Chicago and developing a political philosophy that drew heavily
on the writings of Plato, as well as the ideas of Nietzsche, Heidegger
and Schmitt.
Strauss
believed, like Plato, that the ideal society was one guided by the
wise and not by the masses. Whereas Plato had recognized the impracticality
of such a solution and instead settled for a rule of law, Strauss
believed that the "wise" could indeed rule by implementing a policy
of "perpetual deception" where the "populist" masses would be continually
deceived for their own good and to protect the ruling elites from
popular reprisals.
Although
Strauss remained relatively unknown outside academic circles until
recent years, a cult formed around the Professor and today some 60
members of the Bush Administration are identified as Straussians.
Many of the key ideologues of neoconservatism studied under Strauss
or his students. Amongst them was Paul Wolfowitz, the hawkish Deputy
Secretary of Defense who studied under Strauss and completed his PhD
under Straussian professor, Albert Wohlstetter. Wohlstetter also taught
Richard Perle and Ahmad Chalabi (the American bought-and-paid-for
Iraqi Quisling). Strauss' acolyte Allan Bloom, author of Closing
of the American Mind, taught Francis Fukuyama. William, Irving
Kristol, and Gary Schmitt, the director of the Project for the New
American Century (PNAC) have all admitted to being heavily influenced
by Straussian thinking.
Like the
neoconservatives of today, Strauss was not himself a religious man,
yet espoused religion as a means of ensuring order for the people
who would, without religion, be uncontrollable. Irving Kristol, describing
the Straussian contribution to neoconservative thought, remarked that
neoconservatives are "pro-religion even though they themselves may
not be believers." They are pro-religion only because they believe
religion is a useful tool for maintaining order and control over a
society.
Strauss
wrote that "mankind is intrinsically wicked" and therefore has to
be governed. Before man can be governed, he opined, men must be united;
and the only way in which humans can be united is when they are united
against other people. The neoconservative's demonization of Muslims
and Arabs should be understood in this context. The constant series
of security alerts and warnings of impending attack by terrorists
is merely an instrument to unite the people behind an easily visualized
enemy.
Although
Strauss lifted his idea of the "noble lie" from Plato, this is not
what Plato intended. When Plato spoke of the noble lie, he spoke of
fables and stories that, although false, carried a central truth from
which the reader or listener could benefit. Plato warned of the corrosive
effect that the type of lies told by the neoconservatives would have
on the human soul: "false words are not only evil in themselves, but
they infect the soul with evil."
Their
contemptuous attitude towards the "populist" masses is reflected in
the countless lies told to the American people by the neoconservatives.
The argument that Iraq had a connection to September 11 is now admitted
to have been spurious. The claim that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction
has been proven to have been almost certainly false. The claim that
Saddam was capable of launching an almost immediate attack on America
and Europe was untrue. The idea that the entire Iraqi invasion and
occupation could be retrospectively justified by Saddam's past human
rights violations insults the intelligence of every American and provides
a textbook example of Straussian contempt for the easily-duped and
manipulated public.
Put simply:
the neoconservatives, their press, and their think-tanks are liars.
They lie not because it is merely politically expedient, but because
the "noble lie" is an intrinsic part of Straussian political philosophy
and is needed to hoodwink the American people into supporting a war
that is against both the national interest and the foreign policy
trajectory established by America's Founding Fathers.
So we
were told lies about Afghanistan and we were told lies about Iraq.
Today, we are being told lies about Saudi Arabia and the threat that
America's long-standing ally in the region poses to the American people.
Tomorrow, we will be told more lies to justify "regime change" or
"nation building" in yet another Middle Eastern society.
There
are no neoconservatives in foxholes because those foxes are holed
up in Washington. And unless the neoconservatives are exorcised from
the White House, we can expect more American and allied troops to
be sent to kill and be killed on the wings of a Straussian lie.