Satiric Libertarianism

Writing on the Reason magazine website, neocon Michael Young bemoans the lack of an American equivalent of Le Canard Enchaine:

“You have to wonder why a similar national publication doesn’t exist in the U.S. The popularity of The Onion, or the fact that a magazine like Spy managed to have considerable influence during the 1980s, suggest that Americans aren’t all that satire-resistant.”

That’s strange: I thought Reason was a satirical magazine. After all, here is a “libertarian” periodical that publishes Young’s warmongering screeds, takes a “neutral” position on Iraq — and George W. Bush’s project of world conquest“liberation” — while contenting itself with calls for the legalization of methamphetamine and an unabashedly nerdy obsession with “The Simpsons.” Mass murder is “debatable,” from this “libertarian” viewpoint: what isn’t debatable is putting heroin in school vending machines to let the free market work its magic. Now, that’s got to be satire. But not in a good way …

Edwardian Evasions

Via Matt Yglesias, here’s John Edwards’ position on the withdrawal-from-Iraq question:

When we say complete withdrawal we mean it. No more war. No combat troops in the country. Period. But we’re also being honest. If John Edwards is president, we’re not going to leave the American Embassy in Iraq as the only undefended embassy in the world, for example. There will be Marine guards there, just like there are at our embassies in London , Riyadh , and Tokyo . And just the same, if American civilians are providing humanitarian relief to the Iraqi people, we’re going to protect them. How in good conscience could we refuse to protect them and then allow humanitarian workers to be at risk for their lives or the work not to happen at all? Finally, it’s also Senator Edwards’ position that we will have troops in the region to prevent the sectarian violence in Iraq from spilling over into other countries, for counter-terrorism, or to prevent a genocide. But in the region means in the region – for example, existing bases like Kuwait , naval presence in the Persian Gulf , and so forth. I hope this helps explain Senator Edwards’ position.

Shorter version: When we say complete withdrawal, we mean something else entirely.

Since we’re building the largest embassy everanywhere — in Iraq, one can only wonder how many thousands it will take to “protect” it. In any case, won’t that make for a rather inviting target? Aside from which, how many thousands more will it take to protect the humanitarian workers? Add to that the many more who will be right next door in Kuwait and Qatar, ready to re-invade in order to prevent the chaos we created from spreading.

I disagree with Yglesias — who doesn’t find anything too objectionable in Edwards’ formulation – in that I don’t think we need a force in the region to deal with “contingencies.” If the oil  companies want to protect their investment, then let them hire a private security firm: they’re rich enough to deal with their own “contingencies.” Why is it necessary for a libertarian to explain this to a self-described “progressive”?

What is needed is a candidate who will break, not just with Bush-ism, but with interventionism. It isn’t a matter of who will bring in the best “team,” as Yglesias puts it, but who will bring in a new foreign policy paradigm.

Andrew Sullivan — Still Lying, After All These Years

I kind of feel sorry for Andrew Sullivan for a lot of reasons: having to explain his past pro-war vehemence in light of the disaster unfolding in Iraq can’t be easy, even for a champion evader. And having to live down his more outrageous bouts of hysteria, such as this one:

“The sophisticated form of anthrax delivered to Tom Daschle’s office forces us to ask a simple question. What are these people trying to do? I think they’re testing the waters. They want to know how we will respond to what is still a minor biological threat, as a softener to a major biological threat in the coming weeks. They must be encouraged by the panic-mongering of the tabloids, Hollywood and hoaxsters. They must also be encouraged by the fact that some elements in the administration already seem to be saying we need to keep our coalition together rather than destroy the many-headed enemy. So the terrorists are pondering their next move. The chilling aspect of the news in the New York Times today is that the terrorists clearly have access to the kind of anthrax that could be used against large numbers of civilians. My hopes yesterday that this was a minor attack seem absurdly naïve in retrospect. So they are warning us and testing us. At this point, it seems to me that a refusal to extend the war to Iraq is not even an option. We have to extend it to Iraq. It is by far the most likely source of this weapon; it is clearly willing to use such weapons in the future; and no war against terrorism of this kind can be won without dealing decisively with the Iraqi threat. We no longer have any choice in the matter. Slowly, incrementally, a Rubicon has been crossed. The terrorists have launched a biological weapon against the United States. They have therefore made biological warfare thinkable and thus repeatable. We once had a doctrine that such a Rubicon would be answered with a nuclear response. We backed down on that threat in the Gulf War but Saddam didn’t dare use biological weapons then. Someone has dared to use them now. Our response must be as grave as this new threat.”

In short: nuke Iraq. That was in 2001, but ever since his ideological makeover, he’s run away from off-the-reservation remarks like that, which are not in accord with his new persona. Here at Antiwar.com, however, we’ve been on his case, reminding him of his past call for what would have amounted to genocide against the Iraqi people, and wondering if and when he’ll apologize — or at least come clean with an acknowledgement that he was, after all, wrong.

Not our Andy! Oh no, certainly not: over the years, he’s steadfastly ignored the moral implications of his “let’s-nuke-Iraq” stance, in effect dropping it down the Memory Hole, along with his vicious attacks on the antiwar movement as a “fifth column.” Now, however, he has at least indicated that he knows he has a problem with his credibility — after all, how can he condemn the Bush record on torture when his own record includes advocacy of nuclear mass murder? Today he posted this item:

Try not to worry too much about the latest attempt to figure out who made it and distributed it in 2001.

The link takes you to “The American Thinker,” where Laurie Mylroie, — Yes, that Laurie Mylroie! — trots out her theory that Iraq was indeed behind the anthrax attacks, and points to Marty “Arabs Are Subhuman” Peretz as her authority in the matter. Peretz, in turn, points to an article [.pdf file] by Dany Shoham and Stuart M. Jacobsen, that appeared in the Journal of Intelligence and Counterintelligence, which maps out an elaborate rationale for believing the Iraqis were behind the anthrax attacks. Jacobsen is or was an electronics researcher at Texas Instruments, and an avid poster of angry tirades on the FreeRepublic.com website. Senor Shoham, a former IDF lieutenant colonel and “senior analyst,” is the author of a previous article, appearing in the same journal, that reiterated all the tired old “links” between Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden that have long since been discredited, and added on the supposed responsibility of Iraq for the anthrax attacks by citing “circumstantial” evidence (his word). The new piece merely takes another tack, and tries to trace the anthrax spores using “technical” (i.e. quasi-“scientific” means) to link the particular anthrax spores and their composition to Iraq — all based on the completely debunked claim that the spores contained additives that constituted “weaponization.” And on what, in the end, is the Shoham-Jacobsen thesis based?

In short: nothing. No evidence is presented: instead, the authors rely on “clustering” theory, which tries to detect “patterns” without proof of direct causation. Based on this very thin reed, Shoham and Jacobsen name two individuals — Fuad el-Hibri, a Saudi financier and the director of BioPort, which has a license to manufacture anthrax in the U.S., and Dr. Wouter Basson, formerly a top bio-warfare expert for the South African army. El-Hibri is accused solely on the basis of his “access to certain laboratories,” and the latter is targeted because, according to the authors, “Basson has been revealed while trailed to be that type.”

I’m almost afraid to ask: trailed by whom?

The real kicker, however, is the following statement: “Notably, and in spite of continuing claims that no solid connections—including the contexts of CBW [chemical and biological warfare] at–large, as well as the 2001 Twin Towers attack— existed between al-Qaeda and Iraq, the opposite has increasingly and firmly been emerging since the 2003 invasion of Iraq.”

This is footnoted — in keeping with the scholarly apparatus that disguises this exercise in pure propaganda — and here are the references: “Jonathan Schanzer, ‘‘Saddam-Bin Laden Links,’’ The Weekly Standard, 1 March 2004; ‘‘Inside the Ring: Notes from the Pentagon—Iraq-al Qaeda Link,’’ The Washington Times, 19 March 2004; Frank J. Gaffney Jr., ‘‘Terror-Tied by Memo,’’ The Washington Times, 9 May 2004; Laurie Mylroie, ‘‘The Saddam-9-11 Link Confirmed,’’ FrontPageMagazine.com, 11 May 2004; Editorial: ‘‘Saddam’s Files: New Evidence of a Link Between Iraq and al-Qaeda,’’ The Wall Street Journal, 27 May 2004; Laurie Mylroie, ‘‘All in the Family?,’’ The New York Sun, 24 June 2004.”

The Kool-Aid cultists persist, in spite of all the evidence — Senor Shoham, it seems, is also a leading proponent of the Iraq WMD cargo cult, who claims that they did exist and were moved to Syria. These loons are still busy constructing and elaborating their mythology, which spreads — with the help of useful idiots like Sullivan — and infects the political atmosphere like a poisonous fog. A fog of lies.

In fact, we don’t need to pore over dog-eared pages of old Weekly Standards and the ravings of the monomaniacal Ms. Mylroie — who has made a career out of attributing virtually every atrocity in the past decade or so to Saddam Hussein — to dig out some credible clues to unlocking the mystery of the anthrax attacks. Go here, here, here, and here, for starters, to read about an American scientist, Dr. Philip Zack, who was videotaped sneaking into the Ft. Detrick biowarfare laboratory that stocks the Ames strain of anthrax used in the attacks. According to this series of stories in the Hartford Courant, Zack had a grudge against an Egyptian American scientist at the same facility, Dr. Ayaad Assaad, and may have been involved in a racist frame-up attempt. The FBI still won’t release important evidence pointing down this particular trail, in spite of renewed interest in the long-stalled “investigation.” In the meantime, the perpetrators are still out there, and Sullivan, Ms. Mylroie, and the IDF school of criminal investigation get to float their self-referential mythos as if it were credible. Is there no form of intellectual dishonesty these people won’t stoop to in order to rationalize their own moral emptiness?

UPDATE: For the latest on the anthrax investigation — or, rather, the lack of a real investigation — go to Ed Lake’s website, the place to find solid information on this complex — and fascinating — subject.

Frederick A.O. Schwarz Jr. and Aziz Huq

Unchecked and Unbalanced: Presidential Power in a Time of Terror

Frederick A.O. Schwarz Jr., former chief council for the Frank Church Committee hearings, and Aziz Huq of the Brennan Center for Justice at New York University School of Law discuss their book Unchecked and Unbalanced: Presidential Power in a Time of Terror, discuss the Church committee investigations of the late 70s and the abuses they found, how things are even worse now, the impotence of the U.S. Congress, how Bush has made our terrorism problem worse by torturing people and the false accusation that the Church Committee hearings somehow lead to September 11th.

MP3 here.(16:32)

In a distinguished legal career spanning four decades, Mr. Schwarz has shown a unique ability to combine the highest level of private practice with a series of critically important public service assignments. In every case, Mr. Schwarz has handled these responsibilities with his trademark grace and insight. He comes to the Center with a broad litigation record from Cravath, Swaine & Moore, where he had been a partner since 1969. Mr. Schwarz left the firm twice, once to serve as chief counsel to the Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activity (1975-1976), and again to serve as Corporation Counsel under New York City Mayor Edward I. Koch (1982-1986). In 1989, he chaired the commission that revised New York City’s charter. In addition to currently serving as senior counsel at the Brennan Center for Justice, he chairs the New York City Campaign Finance Board, the Board of the Natural Resources Defense Council, and the Board of the Vera Institute of Justice.

Mr. Schwarz received an A.B. magna cum laude from Harvard University in 1957 and a J.D. magna cum laude from Harvard Law School in 1960, where he was an editor of the Law Review. After a year’s clerkship with Judge J. Lumbard of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, he worked one year for the Nigerian government as Assistant Commissioner for Law Revision under a Ford Foundation grant.

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Before joining the Brennan Center, Mr. Huq clerked for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg during the October 2003 Term of the Supreme Court of the United States, and for Judge Robert D. Sack of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals (2001-02). He graduated summa cum laude from both the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (1996), and Columbia Law School (2001). At Columbia, he was Essay and Review Editor of the Columbia Law Review, and received several academic awards, including the John Ordonneux Prize (given to the graduating student with the highest grade point average). He is published in the Columbia Law Review, the Yearbook of Islamic and Middle Eastern Law, the World Policy Journal and the New School’s Constellations Journal. He has written for Himal Southasian, Legal Times and the American Prospect, and appeared as a commentator on Democracy Now! and NPR’s Talk of the Nation. Before and during law school, Mr. Huq has also worked on human rights issues overseas in Guatemala and Cambodia. In 2002, he received a Columbia Law School Post-Graduate Human Rights Fellowship to work with the International Crisis Group studying constitutional reform in Afghanistan. He has since worked with ICG in Pakistan, and Nepal on legal and constitutional reform issues. He is co-writing a book on presidential power and national security, to be published in March 2007 by the New Press.