Fukuyama on the Neoconservatives

The Atlantic is running a series that “attempt[s] to replicate what the French author Alexis de Tocqueville accomplished in the nineteenth century with his book Democracy in America,” this time through the eyes of Frenchman Bernard-Henri Levy. His interview with Francis Fukuyama reveals an intellectual battle in the neoconservative movement:

Then we start talking about the war in Iraq, which, contrary to my expectations, he, unlike most other neo-conservatives, in fact condemned. We talk about one of his articles, “The Neoconservative Moment,” which he wrote in reaction to a speech given by Charles Krauthammer at the annual dinner of the American Enterprise Institute, and which was published in the summer 2004 issue of the neo-conservative journal The National Interest. This article unleashed one of those vigorous debates Fukuyama seems so good at provoking; barely a dozen pages long, it has his typically provocative, cold tone, and his typically Zen-like way of breaking everything in sight without seeming to touch it.

What’s the reason behind his condemnation of the war? What objection does he really have?

No moral objection; for a Hegelian, such an argument would be nonsensical.

No objection from a strategic point of view; the apostle of the end of history, this man who keeps telling us how the provinces of the empire will be brought into line with the victorious world order, could scarcely disagree with the plan to democratize Iraq.

Certainly not the traditional conservative idea that some cultures are better adapted to freedom than others; I sense that Fukuyama isn’t the least bit torn between two great poles, Irving Kristol and Samuel Huntington—between the ex-leftist who has on the whole remained faithful to the universalism of his youth and the postulator of a clash of civilizations who has great difficulty ridding himself of the stumbling block of relativism—and that it’s the former who remains closer to his heart.

No, his great subject, his chief and indeed only disagreement, has to do with the relationship to time that he thinks he can sense in most of his friends who are unconditional supporters of this war—their misunderstanding of the time it actually takes to build democracy, and hence of opportunity and political tactics.

It is here that Fukuyama aims straight for the neoconservative position on gov’t, foreign policy and state-building. Lévy continues: Continue reading “Fukuyama on the Neoconservatives”

Death, destruction, fabulous opportunities

Jonathan has put together a post that shows a horrifying aspect of some political responses to the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

The Fourth Anniversary Of An Enormous Opportunity

And yet, behind their tears, there seems to be something else. When
they think no one is looking, you glimpse another expression flitting
across their face. You think it couldn’t be. But — yes, incredibly
enough, they’re smiling. Because before the bodies are cold, before the mothers have stopped shrieking, our leaders are thinking:

This is really a FANTASTIC OPPORTUNITY.

Kinda like this:

Body

"The devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina offers an historic opportunity to revitalize the Gulf Coast."

— Sen. Norm Coleman (R-MN)

Photo from AMERICAblog

Iraq’s Disappearing Billions

How bad is the corruption in the American System of mercantilist warfare and nation building?

Former DIA/CIA counter-terrorism officer Philip Giraldi reports in the September 12th issue of The American Conservative:

“A Homeland Security Customs Enforcement Department top-secret audit of contracting in Iraq is beginning to reveal a level of corruption and fraud that is crippling both reconstruction and self defense efforts. Water and electricity supplies are at lower levels than one year ago, while the lines at gas stations have become longer. A weapons procurement of more than $5 billion for the Ministries of Defense and Interior under interim Prime Minister Iayd Allawi has reportedly completely disappeared, while a $300 million purchase of 24 military helicopters from Poland bought obsolete aircraft, many of which had already been stripped for parts. Work has never started on hundreds of millions of dollars in infrastructure-improvement contracts given to military cronies. Several deputy ministers who balked at signing multimillion-dollar fictitious contracts have been fired and replaced by more amenable appointees. Meanwhile, the disproportionate number of Kurds in the Defense Ministry is diverting funds and equipment to peshmerga militia units preparing to seize Kirkuk. On the other side of the Green Zone, the Interior ministry’s police commandos provide cover for anti-Sunni hit teams from the Iranian-supported Badr Brigade and from rogue Shi’ite radical Moqtada al-Sadr’s Mehdi Army. The Potemkin-villiage Baghdad government is increasingly irrelevant to the future of Iraq.”

How might you have spent the money the state took from you in order that they might kill all those people and make so many criminals rich?

More on the helicopters here.

Bush is Mad

I hadn’t looked at a copy of Mad magazine for over twenty years when, earlier this year, I came across this profound slam of Bush and his callous attitude toward dead American soldiers. After numerous technical difficulties, I now present it to those who (like me) are not regular readers of Mad magazine. Click picture for larger image.

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