Sunday, December 6, 2009

Antiwar 'Conservatism'

Reihan Salam has an interesting piece at the left-wing Daily Beast, "The New Anti-War Right."

It's a political analysis of congressional support for the administration's troop surge. Salam notes that while President Obama is under fire from the Democrats' radical base, real foreign policy trouble is likely to emerge from a drop in GOP support for the mission in Afghanistan. Here's
a key passage:

Throughout the long presidential campaign, Barack Obama called for winding down the American presence in Iraq to focus on the rapidly deteriorating security situation in Afghanistan, so there is no sense the president is pulling a foreign policy bait-and-switch. But among Democrats, and particularly left-of-center Democrats, there is a pervasive sense that the Obama administration has proved too cautious and centrist on domestic issues. That means there is less willingness to give the president the benefit of the doubt on waging an expensive counterinsurgency, particularly as many of the left’s domestic priorities could well be sacrificed on the altar of deficit reduction.

And so the president is caught in an extremely awkward position. Abandoned by the Democrats, he is relying on the support of a shrinking centrist foreign-policy establishment that, to put it bluntly, has zero political muscle. The conservatives who back the troop surge don’t think the president is going far enough, and most expect that his effort to craft a compromise counterinsurgency will fail. Among grassroots conservatives, there is a growing sense that the U.S. military is too hamstrung by concern about civilian casualties and political correctness to wage an effective military campaign under Obama, which implies that there is little point in offering him political support.
I noticed Salam's article the other day, and had some thoughts about it then, but let them go -- and looking it over now, I disagree with his charaterization of the foreign policy debte on the war. More important is this developing notion of antiwar commentators who claim to be "conservative" (but who end up giving aid and comfort to our enemies); and Daniel Larison was the first to come to mind.

So, no surprise, he's got a totally predicable essay on this now. See, "This 'New Anti-War Right' is Pro-War and Wrong." Checking the entry, we see the classic Larison mindless oppose-war-at-all-costs defeatism. He takes issue with Utah Congressman Jason Chaffetz, a Republican, who is calling for a troop redeployment. Chaffetz, saying "go big, or go home," decries a war fought amid the consraints of political correctness. He writes, "our presence in Afghanistan does nothing more than endanger our troops, compromise our readiness, and waste our money."

Larison revolts, nonetheless. As he writes at
the post:
Critics of the Afghanistan plan such as Chaffetz want to make Afghanistan into a shooting gallery and call it peace. In this way, they can still pretend that they take national security and strategy questions seriously, when they are just reverting to a default position of advocating less restraint, more force and greater indifference to the moral and strategic consequences of our actions. As Chaffetz’s later remarks on Iran make clear, this is not someone interested in reducing the strain on our military or reducing unnecessary risks to American soldiers, as he actively calls for military action that will greatly strain and endanger all of our forces in the Gulf and central Asia. Neither does he give any hint of thinking strategically about how distastrous an Iranian war would be for U.S. and allied interests.
There's more at the post, disgusting as that may be. What's interesting, reading Larison, is that there's little difference between his natterings (despite his claims to "conservatism") and those of the extremist hardliners on the radical left, folks like Code Pink, who have long provided material support to militants on the ground in America's ongoing deployments -- terrorists who are killing U.S. troops:

Larison sits right along with radicals like Justin Raimondo, who likes to spend time with the America-destroying communists World Can't Wait, International ANSWER, and Cindy Sheehan. Indeed, Larison publishes at Raimondo's hate-filled anti-American portal, Antiwar.com.

And that's the thing, hatred of America's forward role in the world ties radical ideologues together, whether they claim to reside on the left or right. The outcome is the same: An American defeat overseas and greater danger to Americans at home.

The fundamental question, always, is what are our interests in Afghanistan? As I've noted many times here, and as former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
has argued, "if you want another terrorist attack in the U.S., abandon Afghanistan."

And THAT is the conservative position. All the rest, from Larison over to
Jodie Evans, Cynthia McKinney, Brian Becker, and E.D. Kain, is a program for leftist revolution. And it should be resisted.

Well, actually, there are some genuine conservatives calling for a U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan, and they're folks like Representative Chaffetz who're sick and tired of the dithering administration, and who rightly know that President Obama cares only about his own reelection, not American national security or the fate of our fighting forces. These are folks like
Pamela Geller and Ralph Peters, both who have argued to bring the troops home, absent a real military strategy of fighting to kill.

And that, of course, is exactly what so-called antiwar conservatives -- like their buddies on the radical left -- just can't stomach.

Image Credit:
Ace of Spades HQ and Don Surber.

7 comments:

Angie said...

Yes, because everybody knows that the war started on 9/11 and they hate us because we're free.

Good thing Reagan didn't pull out of Lebanon!

(rolls eyes)

Old Rebel said...

What we anti-war conservatives can't stomach is the expansion of indebtedness and government power this insane war has created.

As a direct result of the war in Iraq, 90,000 Muslims have been given US citizenship. Please explain how that's a good thing.

Dana said...

Perhaps the anti-war conservatives -- like the anti-war liberals -- need to realize just what and whom we are fighting. We could lose in Vietnam, and it really didn't matter to us, because the Vietnamese Communists were primarily interested in ruling Vietnam.

But if we lose in Afghanistan and Pakistan, the winners will wind up controlling Pakistan -- and Pakistan's nuclear weapons. To lose in the war against the Islamists is to see an atomic bomb shipped into New York harbor.

That will be pooh-poohed by our friends on the left, and not a few of the newly anti-war conservatives -- the ones who became that way when the presidency changed from George Bush to Barack Obama -- but it is a real threat.

Rusty Walker said...

Dana, well said...Afghanistan is now. It has less to do with Reagan or Bush, or Iraq, as we move into 1010. As in every case of U.S. military involvement, war is complex. Americans, myself included, have a short attention span (read: 4 years in a war, and we Americans want to pull out). This isn’t a viable strategy when dealing with enemies that hate us, hate YOU, and are willing to wait for you, while you -us- the privileged Americans, play video games, debate horrific domestic spending and wander confused, because our well-meaning, neophyte, first term president wants to reduce our status in the world. Leave Afghanistan and the Taliban and Al Qaeda will not commune over beers with Barack Obama, they will reorganize and gladly kill you for the Glory of Allah!

Obama’s wayward strategy has three core elements: maintain pressure on al Qaeda on the Afghan-Pakistani border (not in other regions of the world, where they obviously are); stave the Taliban offensive by sending our troops with an unspecified number of NATO troops he “hopes” will join them (NATO troops have never been in the war zones). Lastly, an impossible task, and the key to pulling us out: build Afghan military forces to assume responsibility after we withdraw, beginning in July 2011!

In boxing , I learned, do not telegraph your blows.

We cannot defeat the Taliban/Al Qaeda – if we leave. The Afghans will never be motivated to fight. The Taliban will stay forever – they will await our departure and punish those who aligned themselves with the U.S. And, then (Just like Viet Nam and the Pol Pot gneocide). Terrorists will rebuild, with oil money, and the Iranians will get a bonus, and perhaps sell nuclear weaponry, allowed to proliferate-then, we face a decimated Israel, and then, the Democrats will see that “hope” is not a strategy.

Tapline said...

Donald, I think, the reason some individuals are saying pull out is becasue we as a fighting force have been eunoched. probably spelling isn't correct, but you get the Idea. ROE's are such that the rules of war no longer apply and rather than have a soldier think before pulling the trigger is foolhardy and most likely would cost his/her life. If they can't fight without a lawyer beside them... pull them out....That's what other are saying also....stay well...

Grizzly Mama said...

Obama's Rules of Engagement are lose/lose. I don't want our best and brightest men and women being exploited like this administration insists on exploiting them.

I do believe that Afghanistan is winnable - and I believe that it's important that we fight to win it.

What Obama as CIC has done is an injustice to America and to the military men and women of our great armed forces. If all he can do is play games - then get them the hell out of there.

Tapline says it just right.

Quality Research said...

War is something which only results in misery and pain - yet, it is becomes necessary when terrorism exceeds all limits.

http://www.qualityresearch.org.uk