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Neoconservative Idealism

24 Aug 2007 09:45 am

I got a bit sidetracked into TNR-bashing when I tried to address this subject previously, but I'm interested in Jonathan Chait's view that neoconservatism used to be an honorable, idealistic enterprise that has only very recently become a kind of mindless militarism combined with support for torture, indefinite detention, etc. Now, of course, the original neoconservative foreign policy doctrine was to oppose Jimmy Carter's injection of a larger dose of human rights into US foreign policy and to argue in favor of more vigorous American support for anti-Communist dictators. But I assume we're talking here about what might be termed "second wave" neoconservative foreign policy -- neo-neoconservatism, if you will -- and for this I think it's useful to turn to the foundational document, Kristol and Kagan's 1996 essay "Toward a Neo-Reaganite Foreign Policy".

The goal here, as explained in the essay, is a policy of "benevolent hegemony," obviously an ambiguous phrase. Their complaint with the mid-1990s status quo, however, is clearly not that the US, though hegemonic, is acting in an insufficiently beneficent manner. Rather, they believe that the US, though benevolent, isn't being as forceful as it needs to be in asserting and re-enforcing its hegemonic position. They said that "The dominant strategic and ideological position the United States now enjoys is the product of foreign policies and defense strategies that are no longer being pursued" because "Americans have come to take the fruits of their hegemonic power for granted."

I wouldn't say that the benevolence here is insincere. Rather, it's intellectually shoddy. They say that "The first objective of U.S. foreign policy should be to preserve and enhance that predominance by strengthening America's security, supporting its friends, advancing its interests, and standing up for its principles around the world." Now, Kristol and Kagan clearly believe that America's principles are good ones. Thus, standing up for our principles around the world will do good. They also believe that standing up for our principles around the world were enhance our predominant geopolitical position. We'll be doing well by doing good. "American foreign policy, should be informed with a clear moral purpose," they write, "based on the understanding that its moral goals and its fundamental national interests are almost always in harmony."

This is mighty convenient. And clearly echoed in Bush's second inaugural address where he writes that "America's vital interests and our deepest beliefs are now one." But not only are the interests of American hegemony identical to the pursuit of American values, but the pursuit of American global domination is what the rest of the world wants, too: "Most of the world's major powers welcome U.S. global involvement and prefer America's benevolent hegemony to the alternatives." And it's also good for the Republican Party, since "Over the long term, victory for American conservatives depends on recapturing the spirit of Reagan's foreign policy as well."

I don't know what you'd want to call this. It doesn't sound like idealism to me: it's confusion. Read through the essay and you'll see, repeatedly, that Kristol and Kagan have an agenda to make America more militarily dominant. They don't have any agenda for making America more benevolent except insofar as US military domination just is benevolence. The concepts of benevolence, ideals, humanitarianism, etc., don't carry any independent weight here. They believe that America should coercively dominate the world through military force. Because they believe in a dogmatic form of American exceptionalism they also sincerely believe this will be a good thing, but looked at from the outside the primary reason they believe this is that they believe American dominance is the highest good.

Neo-neoconservatism is, thus, essentially continuous with James Burnham's early Cold War calls for the creation of a US-dominated "universal empire" and with the late-19th century school of imperialism. It's not a coincidence that John McCain's political idol is Teddy Roosevelt. One is tempted at times to say that neoconservatism has improved upon the imperialism of yore by giving it a shiny idealistic gloss, but if you look it up classic imperialism turns out to have had the gloss as well.

(I should note for the record that I became convinced of the essential continuity between neo-neoconservatism and Burnham through Peter Beinart's A Fighting Faith and between neo-neoconservatism and late 19th century imperialism through John Judis' The Folly of Empire).

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Comments (18)

Somehow, "standing usp for our principles around the world" turns out to involve tortring people.

These people have read too much of the wrong parts of Kipling:

Take up the White Man's burden--
Send forth the best ye breed--
Go bind your sons to exile
To serve your captives' need;
To wait in heavy harness,
On fluttered folk and wild--
Your new-caught, sullen peoples,
Half-devil and half-child.

Take up the White Man's burden--
In patience to abide,
To veil the threat of terror
And check the show of pride;
By open speech and simple,
An hundred times made plain
To seek another's profit,
And work another's gain.

Take up the White Man's burden--
The savage wars of peace--
Fill full the mouth of Famine
And bid the sickness cease;
And when your goal is nearest
The end for others sought,
Watch sloth and heathen Folly
Bring all your hopes to nought.

Take up the White Man's burden--
No tawdry rule of kings,
But toil of serf and sweeper--
The tale of common things.
The ports ye shall not enter,
The roads ye shall not tread,
Go mark them with your living,
And mark them with your dead.

Take up the White Man's burden--
And reap his old reward:
The blame of those ye better,
The hate of those ye guard--
The cry of hosts ye humour
(Ah, slowly!) toward the light:--
"Why brought he us from bondage,
Our loved Egyptian night?"

Take up the White Man's burden--
Ye dare not stoop to less--
Nor call too loud on Freedom
To cloke your weariness;
By all ye cry or whisper,
By all ye leave or do,
The silent, sullen peoples
Shall weigh your gods and you.

Take up the White Man's burden--
Have done with childish days--
The lightly proferred laurel,
The easy, ungrudged praise.
Comes now, to search your manhood
Through all the thankless years
Cold, edged with dear-bought wisdom,
The judgment of your peers!

Now, of course, the original neoconservative foreign policy doctrine was to oppose Jimmy Carter's injection of a larger dose of human rights into US foreign policy and to argue in favor of more vigorous American support for anti-Communist dictators.

Even though I'm less than ten years your senior, reading things like this I feel like I can call you "Young Matt".

So, Young Matt ... you have both Carter's foreign policy and the neo-cons quite wrong. Although it's not surprising considering how Carter's foreign policy has been mis-represented since the get-go and the neo-cons as of late have been disconnected with their history.

Re: J.C. there are two things to remember about him. (1) he was the first (?) "born again Christian" president and (2) he was, IIRC, second only to Eisenhower of the 20th century presidents, in terms of the length of time he served in the military. Many people remember the first and think of Carter as "the only President we had the followed the actual teachings of Jesus". But remember, Carter was also a Navy man. And remember Jesus also said "I come to bring the sword".

J.C. was no pacifist -- he stuck to the line of certain people in the military ... the same ones who now whisper in Sy Hersch's and Jack Murtha's ears to tell them what a cluster-$%#& Iraq is. So he was very militaristic when need be (egging on the rebellion in Afghanistan against the Soviet influenced government), but he wasn't about to repeat Vietnam, nor to do anything to get the world too pissed off at us.

As to the neo-cons ... they pre-date Carter. The neo-con movement comes in multiple waves dating back, IIRC, to the 1940s or at least the 1950s, with former Commies and such becoming disaffected by the left and turning stronly to the right. Foreign policy-wise, neo-conservatism combines a certain Commie world view with anti-Communist (and now anti-"Islamofascist") stridency. I could go on, but the calculation I'm running has just finished, so I have to get back to work ;)

Quick hit ... don't put too much stock in neo-con comparisons with Teddy Roosevelt.

The correct comparison is to British Imperialism. Domestically, Teddy Roosevelt was quite the opposite of a neo-con. And that no doubt spilled over into foreign policy. I doubt Teddy Roosevelt would have embraced the neo-liberal consensus today's neo-cons push.

The correct comparison, as many have made before, is to the British Imperialists, who created the neo-liberal consensus (before it was called such) and who supported the same kind of class-based society the neo-cons support.

Also, FWIW, the Southern Right certainly didn't like Teddy Roosevelt like they do the neo-cons. I don't agree with him often (and some of his policy ideas as well as his anti-urban-liberalism, I rather dislike), but do read Michael Lind's book Made in Texas: he has a very good perspective on these sorts of things, having come from Texas himself ...

DAS,

Why do you think what you say about Jimmy Carter contradicts what Matt says about him? What Matt says is something about the goals of Carter's foreign policy. What you say seems to be entirely about methods for attaining goals. I don't see anything in Matt's post to suggest that Carter was a pacifist, or anything in your response that even vaguely undercuts him on Carter.

Lon,

Carter did of course trumpet a certain amount of idealism in his stated goals. And Carter also indicated that it would be a good idea, both morally and pragmatically, to consider human rights in shaping our foreign policy ... and Carter had a point -- did it really do us good to prop up anti-Communists who were still dictators? It just hurt our standing, didn't it?

But how can you call a person with such key foreign policy advisors as Zbigniew Brezhinski (sp) an "idealist"?

"Now, of course, the original neoconservative foreign policy doctrine was to oppose Jimmy Carter's injection of a larger dose of human rights into US foreign policy and to argue in favor of more vigorous American support for anti-Communist dictators. "

I laughed at this, especially the "original" bit.

Ever hear of Wikipedia?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoconservatives

Maybe the anti-war basher of the chickenhawks don't know everything.

It was a largely Jewish intellecutal reaction to the excesses of the 60s. They were turnign away from the new left and the Great Society. They were pro-war in Vietnam and they were wrong about that.

Neocons were right to raise a stink about Bosnia in the 90s, where they saw echoes of the Holocaust.

Peter K,
Did you notice the qualififer "foreign policy" before the word "doctrine" in MY's post?

"The neocons" is a pretty loose term. I think Chait was doing some political positioning by praising their "idealism," but there's no doubt that neocons like Wolfowitz convinced Ronald Reagan that supporting apartheid and the Marcos dictatorship in the Philippines were bad ideas, which was no small accomplishment. And Jeane Kirkpatrick, after all, opposed the invasion of Iraq, but somehow never got around to saying so. So there was a modicum of idealism mixed in there with all the hegemonic muscle-flexing. But now the neocons (what's left of them, because they've had so many deserters) are pretty much hoist on their own petard, or f**ked sideways, as the saying goes.

When I think of neoconservative foreign policy, I'm reminded of the introduction to Fallout. One moment you're watching transparent media propaganda with "Our dedicated boys keep the peace in newly annexed Canada," then you pan back a bit and see the fruits of our imperial ambitions.

I have doubts that neocons care about benevolence and the US. Trotskyites fetisihized the masses while destroying the masses under the militarization of labor. The masses were simply an instrument towards ideological ends driven by historical inevitability. If they were broken, the revolution would still matter more. For neocons, the US plays a similar role. They find electoral success trumpeting a form of reactionary nationalism that is closer to Stalin than Trotsky, but they see the US more as a tool to be wielded by them to remake the world in their image. Israel becomes another staging ground for their theories of how the world should work while they ally themselves with anti-Semites like the Left Behind-type Christian base. Arabs become a mass collection of people upon whom history can be written by neocons. Consider the portrait of Arabs illustrated in "The Arab Mind," which has been influential in crafting the neocon view of the Middle East. Fukuyama, the apostate of neoconservatism, actually writes of the effects of norms and values in politics and is something of a postmodern constructivist, but he was the only neocon to write of this like he understood it on some level, which is why he's no longer a neocon.

Carter and the neo-cons have something deeply American in common: the notion that we know best for other folks and should therefore set about making their lives better by helping them be Just Like Us.

The Americas are where I see the future of the world, but it's a future that can only be adopted, not imposed. There's no rationale or mechanism for a culture which carries thousands of years of history with it to divest itself of its history in order to embrace what, to it, is an untested theory.

There is no Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, but that's what both Carter's and the neocon policies for the world require of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, and, yes, "old" Europe.

If America wishes to be a beacon to the world it needs to stay put and be a beacon. Lighthouses that shift their location every few years are useless to navigation, ditto "helpful" foreign policies that first focus on this foreign land, then that. Asia today is not an unbroken landscape of democratic nations, despite 60 years (1/4 of our entire history) of our benevolent presence in the region.

When I read liberals writing about "neocons", I have to wonder: What's supposed to be "neo" about the conservatives you're complaining about? The original "neocons" were "neo" because they were newly conservative, being former liberals. But when you apply the term today to people who never switched sides, you just look silly to anyone who understands what the term actually refers to.

Wouldn't be simpler to just call them "right-wing hawks", or something else that actually makes sense, instead of appropriating the name of a mostly spent faction in the conservative movement?

"When I read liberals writing about "neocons", I have to wonder: What's supposed to be "neo" about the conservatives you're complaining about? The original "neocons" were "neo" because they were newly conservative, being former liberals. But when you apply the term today to people who never switched sides, you just look silly to anyone who understands what the term actually refers to."

Fine, then tell the people who write books like Irwin Stelzer and Murray Friedman that their books about being neconservative are wrong because they don't know what to call themselves.

Brett, did you know that when the word "sophisticated" came into English it was a synonym for "corrupted"? Or that the word "silly" originally meant "pious or innocent" and then became synonymous with "feeble and pitiable" before it came to its current meaning?

"Peter K,
Did you notice the qualififer "foreign policy" before the word "doctrine" in MY's post?"

Unless I'm mistaken, Vietnam took place before Carter was elected.

Again
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neoconservatives

is just a click away.

And yet I don't see anything Idealistic about supporting the Vietnam War. It was a criminal war. Bush's history summary of Vietnam was wrong.

Peter K. is right - Matt's one-sentence history of the origins of the neoconservative movement couldn't be more wrong.

http://alendalux.blogspot.com/2007/08/neocons-interests-ideals-and-american.html

While I'm at it, this is a good article on neoconservatism, the differences between and within the two generations or neocons and how the term has become completely meaningless. It's written by Gerard Alexander, a poli sci professor at UVA.

http://www.claremont.org/publications/crb/id.1205/article_detail.asp

I'm sure the neo-cons had a sound moral and political basis for everything they said- until they actually had to put their plans into action. Then reality intruded, like it always does.

Remember affirmative action? A wonderful idea, until it met up with reality.


Comments closed September 07, 2007.

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