A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

The dismal prospects of anti-war conservatism

Speaking of the prospects for anti-war conservatism, Michael Tomasky reviews (free registration required) Bill Kauffman’s upcoming Ain’t My America: The Long, Noble History of Antiwar Conservatism and Middle American Anti-Imperialism. Tomasky gives a largely sympathetic hearing to Kauffman’s history-cum-commendation of conservative isolationism and notes that “it wouldn’t be a bad thing to see the Republican Party, and even a good third to 40 percent of the Democrats in Washington (the ones who voted for the Iraq War and continue to support it or the Bush doctrine to some degree), pay the man some heed.”

However, Tomasky dissents (rightly, in my view) from Kauffman’s revisionist take on World War II, and, to a lesser extent, the Cold War. This has always seemed to me to be a weak spot in the paleocon/libertarian take on US military history. It’s well and good to point out, for instance, that the US didn’t face an imminent threat in World War II, but are we supposed to have been sanguine about the prospect of Hitler overruning Western Europe?

Where Tomasky and Kauffman agree, of course, is that the present-day GOP and the conservative movement are precisely 180 degrees away from the non-interventionism of the Anti-Imperialist League and the other conservative stalwarts who populate Kauffman’s story. As Tomasky puts it:

The Republican Party has become, in short, a party of empire. The conservative movement is now a movement dedicated to American hegemonic dominion. And, given the lack of debate, both will likely remain that way for some time. These statements are true not only of the major presidential candidates, but of the vast majority of Republicans in Congress, most conservative foreign-policy think-tankers, and most high-level GOP operatives involved in policy-making. If the travesty that was our invasion of Iraq has not had the power to change these facts, it is difficult to imagine what set of circumstances could.

I once thought that the Republican Party could be the anti-war party. During the 90s Republicans in Congress opposed the Clinton administration’s military adventures, and some even talked in ways that suggested we could become a normal country again rather than a globe-straddling colossus. I even remember a New Republic cover in the late 90s asserting that the parties had switched places: the Republicans were now the doves and the Democrats the hawks (to the liberal hawks of TNR this was a welcome development). But, in any event, we’ve all seen how that turned out.

For the foreseeable future, whatever opposition to a policy of US global hegemony there’s likely to be will largely come from the Left. Paleocon isolationist-types make up a miniscule part of the conservative movement and the GOP coalition, as Ron Paul’s candidacy amply demonstrated. We can talk about the betrayal of “true conservatism” till the cows come home, but conservatism–like any political perspective–is as conservatism does. To moan about the loss of true conservatism is like Marxists complaining that “real” socialism hasn’t been tried yet.

P.S. I reviewed Kauffman’s last book here.

2 responses to “The dismal prospects of anti-war conservatism”

  1. The GOP dumped isolationism just in time for the election of 1948, the fall of China, and the Korean War.

    Henry Luce, the China Lobby, Douglas MacArthur, and the rise of the HUAC and Joe McCarthy saw the GOP drive the Dems, already committed to refusal to withdraw from the globalism brought on by WW2 (the sort of thing that happened after WW1), even further into crack-brained anti-Communist globalism than they actually wanted to go.

    Though it does remain true they were never as nuts as the Cold War GOP that toyed with deliberate war with China to put Chiang in power after 1949, wanted war with Castro, and alwars babbled about rollback as the necessary, aggressive alternative to containment.

    Both parties became globo-interventionist during WW2 and neither wanted to withdraw from globalism at its end.

    Neither party has been willing since them to consider that there is no good reason to continue military globalism, and lots of good reason to abandon it.

    “Islamofascism” and the danger of terrorism have been blown up into an excuse for not only the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and the one coming in Iran but continuing American globalism in general.

    When McCain pointed out how long we have been in Korea, for example, who stood up and said “I’ve been meaning to say something about that . . . “?

  2. PS. Your guy Tomsky is nuts, too.

    He describes the US Cold War as run by “policymakers confronting a totalitarian state determined to rule the world.”

    Balderdash.

    Kennan (“The Long Telegram”) was right and Nitze (NSC 68) was wrong.

    And he seriously thinks the world will go to Hell if we Americans don’t take care of it . . . and won’t if we do!

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