TPMCafe
« FRONTLINE Last Night: Bush Not Involved in Dealing With Economic Crash | Home | What kind of economic stimulus do American women want? »

Neo-cons, Rising Again?

user-pic


Blogging at the New York Times under the title "Neoconservatism Lives!", Times Book Review deputy editor Barry Gewen touts Times regular reviewer Jacob Heilbrunn's latest suggestion -- this time in The American Conservative magazine -- that neo-cons are rising again.

Gewen isn't only being provocative, although, Lord knows, he tries. He actually likes the idea: "The Iraq war was never a partisan affair," he explains, adding that "Many prominent Democrats and liberals like Christopher Hitchens, Paul Berman and George Packer supported it." Gewen neglects to mention that he supported it, too, along with his boss Sam Tanenhaus and most of the political reviewers they published, as I showed here and in The Nation.

And how are Times Book Review readers responding? Click here and enjoy the storm of anger and derision that Gewen wound up provoking in Times readers.

Readers aren't impressed by his claim that, just like neo-cons, Hitchens, Berman, Packer and others "wanted to promote democracy in the Middle East." Or by Gewen's unsubtle hint that we should all support the Iraq venture because he once asked David Brooks and Paul Berman "what difference there was in their positions on Iraq" and "they agreed that there wasn't any."

Gewen is sanguine even about Heilbrunn's suggestion that neo-cons may insinuate themselves back into power thanks to a recent report on possible American responses to genocide -- co-authored by Hillary Clinton's friend and predecessor Madeline Albright -- that Heilbrunn calls "essentially a stalking horse for liberal intervention. It would create a permanent bureaucracy with a vested interest in insisting upon armed interventionism whenever and wherever the U.S. pleases...."

The American Conservative magazine published Heilbrunn's warning, not in order to cheer what he'd written but to alert readers to the threat coming from neo-cons, whom many conservatives would like to defeat, for reasons I sketched recently here and in openDemocracy. American Conservative editor Scott McConnell actually endorsed John Kerry in 2004, warning that four more years of George W. Bush would leave the conservative movement exactly where those four years have left it. In 2008, McConnell, horrified by neo-cons' battening onto John McCain's campaign, actually canvassed for the Obama in Virginia.

The New York Times Book Review in that period was far less horrified by what the Republican Party was becoming than was The American Conservative. Gewen unintentionally reminds us of this when he spins Heilbrunn's warnings about neo-cons as far as possible from Heilbrunn's actual intent and from McConnell's brave responses as an editor and citizen. But now Gewen's own respondents are reminding us what neo-cons are worth to many of his and the Book Review's long-suffering readers. Really, you've got to click on to the piece and scroll down to these comments!

And when more people become acquainted with Barry Gewen's long campaign, which he's been conducting in the Times and the World Affairs Journal, to get readers to join him and Alan Dershowitz in thinking the unthinkable about torture, his influence -- not on rigorous and necessary thinking, but on the selection and assignment of political books at the Book Review -- will come into more chilling focus.


5 Comments

| Leave a comment
user-pic

The important component to neocon durability is American media complicity. Charles Krauthammer and David Brooks continue to write their columns in America's two leading newspapers. Fred Hiatt still controls the Washington Post editorial page. After everything he said turned out to be wrong, the New York Times hired William Kristol as a columnist; he now leaves the Times in its dankest hour, as it fades from status as America's "newspaper of record", bundled up and tossed off in a fire sale to a Mexican tycoon. Perhaps Kristol's presence helped hasten its tarnishment. But now, who cares?

The economic and political elite had - and has - a big stake in these snake-oil peddlers. Thomas E. Ricks has chimed in with a new book telling us why we should, and will, occupy Iraq forevermore. "Liberal interventionists" like Martin Indyk and Peter Beinert hold considerable sway in government and media, and new blunders are planned from Afghanistan to, evidently, Iran.

Who's really pushing this crap? And isn't there a viability margin between strident crusades and discredited demise?

user-pic

Heilbrunn's book forecast that the neocons wouldn't go away. That doesn't mean he's wrong. But it should be one source of skepticism as to the reputational stake he now has in promoting that view.

user-pic

Good for Heilbrunn for keeping a close eye on the neocons as they attempt to morph again in their support of politicians they find amenable to their views. I do take issue with his statement positing that: "The refusal of Clinton to appoint any neocons...".

It's not the case and a curious oversight, starting with the choice of James Woolsey as chief of the CIA. What of Martin Indyk, the foreignborn and raised AIPAC/WINEP operative who eventually became Clinton's US Ambassador to Israel among other positions?

There is a damn good reason that Hillary's appointment has been in such favor in certain circles, they see her as one of their own. Hopefully, she will prove them wrong although her appointments thus far are met with great approval by the usual suspects.

Speaking of Christopher Hitchens, he has been swanning around Lebanon in anticipation of a talk he's giving (today) at the American University in Beirut entitled "Where are the revolutionaries in today's Middle East?".

It appears that Christopher got drunk in a bar in Beirut and decided to prove his stones by writing "Fuck the SSNP" on one of their posters hanging outside the bar on a wall...in full view of some SSNP "thugs" who took exception. Oops:

http://abumuqawama.blogspot.com/2009/02/hitchens-beaten-by-ssnp.html

It will be interesting to see if Hitchens mentions his little taste of Lebanese sectarian sentiments and/or somehow spins it into a tale of his uncompromising courage in the face of Islamofascists.

Facebook

bağkur borç sorgulama

With all the sites out there with information on them with a ton of junk it's nice to find a blog whose admin takes the time to create good material. TY for the good post.

sgk

Facebook

emekli sandığı

I used to be very pleased to discover this site.I needed to we appreciate you this great read!! I definitely enjoying every amount of it and that i have you ever bookmarked to look at new belongings you post.

araç sorgulama

Leave a comment

Advertisement
Please disable your adblocker!
Ads are how we pay the bills!

Subscribe

The Coffee House
TPMCafe's regulars

House Brew
From Your Cafe Editor

Special Guests
Big names and big brains

Special Features
Pressing topics and trends

Table for One
An expert's week-long talk.

All Reader Posts
TPM readers discuss.

Advertise Liberally
Share
Close Social Web Email

"To" Email Address

Your Name

Your Email Address