Posted by
ClearCommentary.com on Thursday, November 30, 2006 3:02:29 PM
We begin with an editorial by two presumably informed international affairs analysts, Nikolas Gvosdev, editor at the National Interest, and Ray Takeyh, a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.
Readers skilled in rhetorical analysis will find that although this editorial enjoys the predictable patina of the learned mind, its polemical focus is exclusively unilateral, which is to say it provides the usual excoriation of U.S. foreign policy under President Bush, without any collateral analysis of the policy's political context.
Therefore, their editorial is laced with the blinkered critics' favorite catchwords and phrases, from "hubris" to "quagmire in Iraq" and even quoting "a besieged Richard Nixon" who called America "a pitiful, helpless giant" during the trauma of the Vietnam war. Let's take a few steps back from this canvas of hyperbole and think tank cant.
First, we can be assured that were it not for the political stalemate in Iraq most of the criticism of this administration would evaporate. It's a testimony to our generation's arrested adolescent development that it is at once incapable of seeing through the current challenges and has no stomach for the sting of battle. Academic comparisons of casualties in previous wars for this breed of weak-kneed American elicits little more than yawns because they do not see in Iraq anything more than the losses. As with every problem in their lives on a continuum from traffic jams to the inconvenience of having to confront Islamic jihad, they just want it to be over.
Indeed, the sophistry in this editorial that is cross-dressed in the guise of serious intellectual pursuit would be laughable were it not so damaging to the goal of bringing a degree of wisdom to America's challenges on the global stage.
Whether it's due to the remarkably resilient half-life of our tragic experience in Vietnam or merely the ignoble way in which we've learned to eschew responsibility, this generation has developed a unique aptitude for misreading the seminal events of our day as well as fundamentally misappraising the downstream implications.
That goes far to explain our habituated dismissal of the nascent storm on our horizon in the form of Islamic terrorism, not to mention our learned instinct to see Europe as the world's intellectual bellwether, worthy of emulation. Indeed, the United Nations, easily the most corrupt and vile organization in history, is lionized by the world's elites as the moral exemplar and the key to resolving the vexing problems in the Middle East.
When these gimlet-eyed analysts write that "America's invasion and subsequent occupation of Iraq has raised serious questions about its judgment" we can see an alarming majority of Americans nodding in intellectually obsequious agreement. That its misinformation campaign has succeeded so spectacularly is evidenced by the diminishing Republican voices that historically contested such assertions.
Such analyses have further blurred the lines between good and evil and now overtly question whether America is truly the force for good that it always has been. Beyond providing fodder for liberalism's devout disdain for American exceptionalism, such efforts also abet the belligerent impulse so much in evidence in Iran and North Korea.
The stock criticisms of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, rarely commensurate with his threats to eliminate Israel from the map, have now become even more tepid and forgiving as his open letter to the American people indicates. This is a man well schooled in the art of political warfare because he is acutely aware that America's redoubtable strength can never be directly confronted, but that the nation itself can be obliquely undermined through a direct marketing campaign.
Convince the people that their military's presence in the Middle East is fueling hatred of Americans in all corners of the world and the shame and embarrassment will leverage them into political submission.
In reality, the civilized world has succumbed to an unprecedented and incapacitating disorder, one predicated on the inversion of good and evil and manifest in a desperate desire to avoid confrontation, to appease aggressors, and to apparently be content living in a dreamworld where evil can be wished away.
The discomfiting facts of our world are that evil exists, that it's manifest in Russia's support for Iran's nuclear ambitions as well as its murder of journalists who got too close to the truth, in the barbarities in Darfur, to which the civilized world has largely turned a blind eye, and perhaps in its most ghastly incarnation, the Islamic terrorists who are actively seeking a nuclear device.
Is there any American who believes they wouldn't unleash such a weapon in Manhattan or Los Angeles if given the opportunity? Yet we're obliged to suffer the intellectually insulting and insipid palaver emanating from the likes of Gvosdev and Takeyh who appear convinced that America is the world's foremost broker of ill-will and a force for oppression.
Welcome to our Looking-Glass world.