Another Pro-War Conservative Recants

Rod Dreher, author of Crunchy Cons, and a former writer for National Review, recants:

As President Bush marched the country to war with Iraq, even some voices on the Right warned that this was a fool’s errand. I dismissed them angrily. I thought them unpatriotic.

But almost four years later, I see that I was the fool.

More from his blog:

It’s frustrating to get e-mails from people on the Left who assume that because I’ve lost faith in the president and the war, I’ve become some sort of liberal, and from people on the Right who believe the same thing. It only shows how distorted the war has made American politics. I’m no more enamored of the Left’s social agenda than I ever was — and my conservatism is primarily social/cultural/religious. Besides, it was realizing how this war and my initial support of it violated conservative principles that I ought to have been defending at its outset that finally turned me.

Chiefly I should have been completely suspicious of the social engineering that the US government set out to do in Iraq. It didn’t work in the Great Society, and there was no reason to believe that it would work in Iraq. You don’t march in and turn a tribal society that follows a fierce religion into a nation of Western-style liberal democrats. A key conservative truth is that the material order rests on the spiritual order. Iraqi society did not have the spiritual or moral wherewithal to become the kind of nation we set out to make them. It was our Jacobin hubris, our prideful belief in our own power, that got us into this mess. There were conservatives warning against this in 2002, but most of us on the Right didn’t want to listen.

Yes, we did warn Rod and ostensible conservatives that they were marching over a cliff, but they were too busy damning us as “unpatriotic conservatives” and consigning us to the Outer Darkness to pay heed. Now that the validity of what we said, and say, is uncontestable, it’s relatively easy to come out with a recantation, but I’m wondering what the effect of this would have been if it had been done a few years back.

Oh well — better late than never, I suppose.

Chicago Art Show – From Sham to Shame

Antiwar.com contributor Ann Berg is part of a two person art show – From Sham To Shame – for the Chicago Artists’ Coalition that will feature several large collage pieces dealing with the trillion dollar GWOT industry and the Iraq war: giant images of x-rayed bodies and trucks, a prison cell, linen wrapped bodies, a flag crawling with plastic soldiers and more…

The show starts January 19 at 685 N. Milwaukee Ave. Chicago, IL 60622 at 6:00 PM.

Antiwar.com readers in the Chicago area most welcome.

Antiwar GOP Rep. Ron Paul Running for President!

The news is good — for once. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas), the libertarian congressman whose dedication to principle is one of the wonders of the world, is running for the GOP presidential nomination (hat tip: Lew Rockwell).

At last — a Republican who opposes our interventionist foreign policy (consistently and articulately) and who has this to say about the Iraq war. Rep. Paul opposed this rotten war from the very beginning — and, what’s going to be delightful, is that he is not going to be outdone by any Democrat regarding the Iraq issue.

Better yet, this will exacerbate the split in the GOP over the war and give antiwar activists a banner around which to repair during an election season that would otherwise feature the same rogues gallery of warmongers, fence-straddlers, and all-too-familiar faces.