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INDEPENDENT COUNTRY Shattering Illusions The Iraq War is a wake-up call for two conservative bloggers. by James Leroy Wilson August 2, 2007 Two popular bloggers and self-described conservatives, Andrew Sullivan and Rod Dreher, recently repented of their support of the Iraq War. Sullivan writes: One of my own errors before the war was a function of being steeped in Washington policy debates - and neo-conservative arguments - for years. I had been so conditioned to suspect Iraq after 9/11 that my skepticism deserted me. I mentioned Saddam on September 12. The result was that the prelude to the Iraq war was far too easily framed by the information and biases of the Beltway elite, the Pentagon establishment, and the neocon brain-trust. Worse, we were unspeakably condescending to those on the outside who were right. We trusted far too much, and people much further away from the levers of power saw more clearly than we did. I reflected on what things I believed at the onset of the war, that I no longer do as a result of the war. A short list: 1. Having been absolutely certain that the war was the right thing to have done, and that we would prevail easily, I am no longer confident that I can discern when emotion is affecting my judgment unduly. 2. I no longer implicitly trust governmental institutions, including the military -- neither in their honesty nor their competence. 3. I no longer believe the Republican Party is superior in foreign policy judgment to the Democrats. 4. I no longer have confidence in the ability of our military, or any military, to solve deep cultural and civilizational problems through force alone. I mean, I thought nothing could stand in the way of the strongest military fielded since the days of ancient Rome. No more. 5. I have a far greater appreciation for how rare and fragile liberal democracy is, and a corresponding revulsion at the American assumption that it's the natural state of mankind. Which is to say, the war has made me rethink my ideas about human nature, and I'm far more pessimistic now than I ever was. For years I resented these men, and everyone else who made a living as a war cheerleader. It is therefore tempting to say these mea culpas are too little, too late. But then again, a cheerleader isn't a coach or a quarterback, and what transpires "on the field" is not the responsibility or the fault of the cheerleader. A bad law is not the fault of the lobbyist, but of the members of Congress who voted for it. The fault of the lobbyist is that he wants his special interest group to benefit from the State at others' expense, which is theft, but he can't make it so because he doesn't have the power; Congress does. Likewise, Sullivan and Dreher could be faulted for having thought invading Iraq was a good idea, but they didn't "authorize" war or command the armies. For whatever reason, Sullivan and Dreher maintained their illusions about the State, and it took the Iraq War to shatter at least some of them. Perhaps Sullivan and Dreher, now that they have "seen the light," will help correct the course for America and the world. Iraq may be a disaster, but the more this war shatters more people's illusions about the State, the less likely we will a similar war in the future. Perhaps this war, with several hundred thousand dead, will shock enough people to prevent a future war that would kill several million. About the Author: James Leroy Wilson blogs at Independent Country and writes for DownsizeDC.org. Opinions expressed here do not represent the positions of DownsizeDC.org This article was printed from www.partialobserver.com. Copyright © 2010 partialobserver.com. All rights reserved. |