Anti-anti-Trump, Anti-anti-Sanders
Extremism in defense of peace is no vice
By Justin Raimondo
January 30,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Antiwar"
- I
haven’t had this much fun in years – of course I’m
talking about the US presidential election season,
with The Donald taking on all comers, and winning
(at least so far), and Berne Sanders burning up the
self-satisfied mandarins of the Democratic party
Establishment.
What’s
great about this spectacle – and one must view it as
a spectacle in order to gain maximum enjoyment from
it – is that, as none other than Rush Limbaugh
points out:
“Trump
is so far outside the formula that has been
established for American politics that people who
are inside the formula can’t comprehend it. They
don’t understand why somebody would want to venture
so far outside it, because it is what it is, and
there’s a ladder of success that you have to climb.
And somebody challenging it like this in more ways
than one, as Trump is doing, has just got everybody
experiencing every kind of emotion you can: They’re
angry, they are flabbergasted, they’re shocked,
they’re stunned – and all of it because he’s
leading.”
As I
explained
here, and
here, one of the ways Trump is upending the
rules is that he’s broken with the GOP mandarins on
foreign policy. Yes, yes, I know he bloviates
about how he’s “the most militaristic person” on
God’s green earth, but the fact is there’s plenty of
others out there who out-do him in that category.
I’ve heard him say he wants to “bomb the s**t out of
ISIS,” but aren’t we doing that already – to little
effect? When Bill O’Reilly asked him why he didn’t
support putting ground troops in Syria, he answered
“Do you want to run Syria?” O’Reilly demurred. Trump
puffs up his chest and announces he wants us to have
“the strongest biggest baddest military on earth” –
but you’ll note he invariably adds: “So we’ll never
have to use it.”
Most
significantly, he doesn’t want to start World War
III with Vladimir Putin’s Russia: he’s actually
defied the anti-Russian propaganda blitz and said
he’d like to be able to
get along with Putin. This alone would’ve been
enough for the neocons to start a holy war against
him, but he’s even gone further than that and said
the Iraq war – the neocons’ handiwork – was “one
of the dumbest things ever,” and Limbaugh
describes their response to a tee (of course without
naming them).
Oh yes,
it’s great fun watching the waterboarding of the
neocons, because they count among their enemies the
top two contenders for the Republican nomination,
not only Trump but also Ted Cruz. The greasy-haired
Canadian earned their ire when he attacked them
by name, but as Rosie Gray
reports in Buzzfeed they may be
reconciling themselves to Cruz because he’s the only
viable Not-Trump:
“Some of
the hawkish figures who Ted Cruz recently dismissed
as ‘crazy neo-con invade-every-country-on-earth and
send our kids to die in the Middle East’ … say
they’d consider supporting Cruz anyway if he’s the
last man between Donald Trump and the Republican
presidential nomination.
“Cruz, it turns out, hasn’t fully burned his bridges
with that set of advisers and supporters of George
W. Bush – figures like
Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol and former
National Security Council official Elliott Abrams,
who aren’t closed off to Cruz, especially in the
case of Abrams. Indeed, despite some lingering
resentment and suspicion, there are even glimmers of
rapprochement as the Republican primary looks like
it could become a two-man race. ‘I would not
hesitate to back Cruz as the nominee,’ Abrams – who
not long ago
told National Review that Cruz’s use of the word
neocon invoked ‘warmongering Jewish advisers’ – told
BuzzFeed News.”
Cruz, for
his part, is more than willing to smoke a peace pipe
with the War Party:
“In an
interview on his campaign bus in Iowa last week,
Cruz told BuzzFeed News that, despite his jabs at
neocons, he has ‘good relations with a great many
foreign policy thinkers.’ Cruz has
in the past cited Abrams along with former U.S.
Ambassador to the U.N. John Bolton and former CIA
director James Woolsey as trusted foreign policy
experts.”
It’s
getting pretty cozy in that campaign bus. Rosie, who
knows a thing or two about neocons, seems to be the
designated ambassador from Kristol-land to the Cruz
campaign, and as the Anti-Trump Popular Front – the
widest coalition in the history of politics,
stretching all the way from the New York Times
to Charles Krauthammer – tries to sell us on the
idea that the Establishment is now backing Trump
against the “insurgent” Cruz, she provides some
insightful analysis of just who is the Real
Establishment:
“The
neocons’ willingness to consider Cruz stands in
sharp contrast with a new line of current
conventional wisdom in Washington that Cruz, who is
the object of particularly intense personal dislike
from establishment Republicans, is actually less
acceptable to the establishment than Trump.”
We
know who is the Establishment: it’s those brilliant
folks who brought us the Iraq war, who want us to
repeat our mistake in Syria, and who pine for a
US-led regime-change operation in Russia to get rid
of Putin and install a pliable Yeltsin-substitute in
power. The Establishment, in short, is the War
Party, otherwise known as the neoconservatives, and
they are the tireless enemies of peace and liberty.
Until and unless they are destroyed as a viable
political force, either in the GOP or outside it,
there will be no peace in this world. If and when
Trump succeeds in sidelining them, that alone
will be worth whatever price we have to pay in the –
unlikely – event he makes it to the White House.
As even the
usually clueless Ben Domenech, over at The
Federalist,
observes:
“On
foreign policy, Donald Trump is exploiting American
frustration with the elites of both parties. He
cites over and over again his opposition to the war
in Iraq as a smackdown for the neoconservative views
which have ruled the roost in Republican foreign
policy circles for 15 years. But he also uses his
opposition to engagement in Libya to smack Barack
Obama, Hillary Clinton, and Marco Rubio.
“It is
very telling that the two leading candidates in the
GOP primary today are very critical of intervention
in Iraq and Libya and Syria, and this has not only
not hurt them, but potentially helped them reach
more than 50 percent support in the polls. One would
think Republican elites would recognize this and
think about what it means about the views of their
base. One would think, but one would be wrong.”
With the
triumph of Trumpismo having demolished the
GOP foreign policy consensus – and the neocons’
ideological and organizational stranglehold on the
conservative movement – the way will be cleared for
a libertarian-ish insurgency to arise out of the
rubble and make some real headway. I realize it’s
hard to see this at the present moment: just like on
HGTV, when some clueless couple on “Fixer
Upper” or “Property
Brothers” just can’t see that the scary
dilapidated wreck of a house they’re being shown
could become their Dream Home. Yet, in the end, they
are bowled over by the luxurious and stunning
result.
(Of course,
there are no guarantees in life: a lot depends on if
the fractious libertarians, beset as they are by
right-wing opportunism and a
brainless form of anti-political sectarianism,
can finally get their act together.)
On the
other side of the aisle – that is, in the Democratic
party – a similar drama, with some significant
variations, is being played out in the race pitting
Bernie Sanders against Hillary Clinton. The latter
is widely considered the presumptive heir, much like
Jeb Bush was assumed to be the GOP frontrunner on
account of his last name. Yet Bush has been
humiliated and sidelined, and Mrs. Clinton may well
be in danger of sharing his fate: Sanders is beating
her in
New Hampshire as well as
in Iowa. This has “centrist” Michael Bloomberg,
former New York City mayor and professional scold,
so upset that he is
threatening to launch a third party run if
Sanders gets the nod.
The
beleaguered Mrs. Clinton doesn’t have major
principled differences with Sanders when it comes to
domestic policy: their disagreements are over
strategy, not goals. The real split is over foreign
policy, with Hillary the hawk pecking at Sanders
over his relatively dovish stances on issues from
Iran to Libya. And now a posse of “national
security” bureaucrats has taken out after Sanders
with
a joint statement deploring his unwillingness to
parrot the War Party’s line:
“Over
the past four debates, the subject of ISIS and Iran
have come up a number of times. These are complex
and challenging times, and we need a Commander in
Chief who knows how to protect America and our
allies and advance our interests and values around
the world. The stakes are high. And we are concerned
that Senator Sanders has not thought through these
crucial national security issues that can have
profound consequences for our security.
“His
lack of a strategy for defeating ISIS – one of the
greatest challenges we face today – is troubling.
And the limited things he has said on ISIS are also
troubling.
“For
example, his call for more Iranian troops in Syria
is dangerous and misguided and the opposite of what
is needed. Supporting Iranian soldiers on Israel’s
doorstep is a grave mistake. And while we support
de-escalation of Sunni-Shia tensions, his argument
that Iran and Saudi Arabia – two intense adversaries
– should join together in a military coalition is
just puzzling. Indeed, the Iranian government
recently failed to stop protesters from ransacking
and burning the Saudi embassy in Tehran, after which
Saudi Arabia cut off diplomatic ties with Iran.
“We are
all strong supporters of the nuclear diplomacy with
Iran. Some of us were part of developing the policy
that produced the diplomacy over the past several
years. And we believe that there are areas for
further cooperation under the right circumstances.
But Senator Sanders’ call to ‘move aggressively’ to
normalize relations with Iran – to develop a ‘warm’
relationship – breaks with President Obama, is out
of step with the sober and responsible diplomatic
approach that has been working for the United
States, and if pursued would fail while causing
consternation among our allies and partners.
“Given
these concerns, it is important to ask what he would
do on other issues – on Russia, China, our allies,
nuclear proliferation, and so much else. We look
forward to hearing him address these issues.
“We
need a Commander in Chief who sees how all of these
dynamics fit together – someone who sees the whole
chessboard, as Hillary Clinton does.”
The only
time the Clintonistas want to “move aggressively” is
when it involves invading a sovereign nation like
Iraq,
Libya and Syria, and turning it into a cauldron
of Islamist terror. Her “strategy” for defeating
ISIS is to set up “no
fly zones” in Syria, reoccupy Iraq, and
fund the very head-chopping Syrian “rebels” from
which ISIS and Al-Qaeda have sprung and with whom
they are ideologically aligned. Indeed, Mrs.
Clinton, who spearheaded the movement inside the US
government to arm the Islamists in Syria and Libya,
deserves the title “Mother of ISIS.”
As for all
the balderdash about Iran: this is clearly the
Israel lobby talking, and if there was any confusion
about Mrs. Clinton’s role as their champion in the
Democratic party, this should clear it up.
Yet the
Clintonian arguments for an anti-Iranian foreign
policy are not very convincing. For just one
example: If “supporting Iranian soldiers at Israel’s
doorstep is a grave mistake” then is Israel
supporting ISIS at their own doorstep an equally
grave miscalculation? But of course you won’t be
hearing any criticism like that coming from this
crowd.
From a
noninterventionist perspective, neither Sanders nor
Trump is perfect – both are very far from
that. But to nitpick over their deviations is to
entirely miss the point, as sectarians of both the
left and right are bound to do. These two candidates
represent, each in their own way, powerful and
growing tendencies on both sides of the ideological
spectrum that the movement for peace can utilize to
its own advantage. For we cannot change the world
until and unless we begin to understand it: only
then can we take advantage of such openings as it
allows. What is happening in this country is a
rebellion against both wings of the War Party – and
that is something to be celebrated and encouraged,
even as we critique its shortcoming and urge the
rebels to take their insurgency further.
We here at
Antiwar.com do not endorse candidates for office:
nevertheless, we encourage our readers and
supporters to inform themselves and take an interest
in the political process in order to bring about a
more peaceful and a freer world. Insofar as this
election season is concerned, the watchwords or
slogans that give voice to the “correct” position
are best expressed in terms of double-negatives. For
my conservative Republican readers, that would be:
anti-anti-Trump. For the progressive Democrats:
anti-anti-Sanders.
We
are hearing the voices of the Mushy Moderate Middle
rise up in defense of the status quo: Democrats like
the Washington courtier
Dana Milbank are warning us against Sanders,
while the neocons to a man are railing against the
Trumpist Temptation. This should be enough to tell
us what is the right road to take and what our
answer to the Mushy Middletarians must be:
Extremism in defense of peace is
no vice – and moderation in the fight against the
War Party is no virtue!
Justin
Raimondo is the editorial director of Antiwar.com,
and a senior fellow at the Randolph Bourne
Institute. He is a contributing editor at The
American Conservative, and writes a monthly
column for Chronicles. He is the author of
Reclaiming the American Right: The Lost Legacy
of the Conservative Movement [Center for
Libertarian Studies, 1993; Intercollegiate Studies
Institute, 2000], and An Enemy of the State: The
Life of Murray N. Rothbard [Prometheus Books,
2000].
NOTES IN
THE MARGIN
You can
check out my Twitter feed by going
here.
But please note that my tweets are sometimes
deliberately provocative, often made in jest, and
largely consist of me thinking out loud.
I’ve
written a couple of books, which you might want to
peruse.
Here is the link for buying the second edition
of my 1993 book,
Reclaiming the American Right: The Lost Legacy of
the Conservative Movement, with an
Introduction by Prof.
George W. Carey, a
Foreword by Patrick J. Buchanan, and critical
essays by
Scott
Richert and
David Gordon (ISI
Books, 2008).
You can buy
An Enemy of the State: The Life of Murray N.
Rothbard (Prometheus Books, 2000), my
biography of the great libertarian thinker,
here.
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