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Matt Welch knows what John McCain thinks about foreign policy and war. McCain isn't exactly subtle about what he thinks. So why do so many people think he's a secret peacemaker?
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Comments to "New at Reason":

Pig Mannix | April 1, 2008, 12:15pm | #

So why do so many people think he's a secret peacemaker.

Well, the last Republican candidate for president promised us a "humbler foreign policy". Since I have no reason to believe McCain is any less of a liar than Bush, I won't be too terribly surprised if a President McCain withdraws the troops from Iraq as soon as the oath of office is out of his mouth.

joe | April 1, 2008, 12:17pm | #

D.C. newsies consistently confuse "nice guy I get along with" with "political moderate."

Especially Broder.

Neil | April 1, 2008, 12:22pm | #

With McCain as our Commander-in-Chief, we will have peace trhough strength.

The kind of "peace" we will get with Obama is the same "peace" Neville Chamberliane gave Britain in 1938.

Jennifer | April 1, 2008, 12:35pm | #

The kind of "peace" we will get with Obama is the same "peace" Neville Chamberliane gave Britain in 1938.

I know I'll regret asking this, but ... in this analogy of yours, who is playing the role of Hitler, determined and quite able to take over a good chunk of the civilized world?

joe | April 1, 2008, 12:36pm | #

Exactly the right comparison.

If we let the Iraqis have Iraq, who knows what they'll start demanding next.

Personally, I don't buy that BS about the Iraqis just seeking to protect the rights of Iraq's Iraqi minority. That's just a cover for their ambitions of bringing all of Iraqi - both the Iraqi parts, and the Iraqi parts - under Iraqi control.

John | April 1, 2008, 12:38pm | #

" Oh, it's healthy. We need a bigger Army, we need a bigger Marine Corps. You look around the world−Iran, North Korea, uh, Afghanistan−it's not going to be over for a long time."

Obama has come out and said the same thing about increasing the size of the military. Also, Obama, while arguing for a timed withdrawal from Iraq, also says he will ramp up US involvement in Afghanistan and has endorsed the idea of raids into Pakistan. Is Obama a cheap date to Matt? Maybe Obama is lying but I see no reason not to take him at his word. If you really are an "anti-interventionist" as Welch claims to be, you really don't have any options in this election. I don't like Obama but I would not call him an isolationist and don't see how he is any less likely to get the US into another war than McCain. I don't get Welch's obsession with McCain at the expense of covering any other candidate or issue.

Neil | April 1, 2008, 12:38pm | #

Jennifer the Islamofascists have made it clear they want to restore a Global Caliphate, then march on the civilized world.

We must stop them, and the central battle now is in Iraq.

If we leave now, if we don't finish the job, Al Qaeda and Iran and the other Islamofascists will crow to the world that they defeated America, that America is weak and decadent and that they can defeat us anywhere. Is that what you want? I sure don't!

Jake Boone | April 1, 2008, 12:42pm | #

Yes! Endless war is the only way to stop that infernal crowing! There is no cost to great, if only the crowing can be prevented!

Jake Boone | April 1, 2008, 12:43pm | #

too great, dammit.

Chuck | April 1, 2008, 12:44pm | #

Neil--

What is a "Freedom Swatch" anyway? I have heard of swatches of fabric and of colors, but never swatches of freedom. Is your .org dedicated to swatches of freedom?

Pottsy | April 1, 2008, 12:46pm | #

I don't like Obama but I would not call him an isolationist and don't see how he is any less likely to get the US into another war than McCain.

The key difference is that there is an actual enemy - who has successfully attacked us - living along the border of Afghanistan and Pakistan.

Mutts | April 1, 2008, 12:49pm | #

I think the reasoning is a variant of "only Nixon (a hawk on Communism) could go to (Communist) China." Only this time the causality is muddied up: McCain is so much of a hawk that he could only be trying to make peace. It's not impossible, but wildly improbable.

Here is the kernel of truth in McCain-as-peacemaker. Although there are relatively few Americans who now want to keep the war in Iraq going, there are also relatively few who favor withdrawal if it will mean accepting that we've lost. So it's a logjam. The person to accomplish withdrawal needs to persuade doubters that the strongest possible effort was made -- and who better than someone widely known as a hawk?

McCain also just happens to be an expert at conceding defeat -- the man is a walking mea culpa. (Perhaps a lingering effect of a military career whose greatest success was surviving years of torture). So people are not wholly imperceptive to wonder whether, after a bout of recklessness, McCain will once again feel a need to don the hair shirt and turn around the way he did on campaign finance after Keating.

Neil, is there a joke I'm missing, or didn't you hear that WWII analogies are almost universally hilarious? Didn't Hitler promise Germans "peace through strength," or something like it? Well, if McCain is Hitler and Obama is Chamberlain, you've got nothing to worry about this November!

Cesar | April 1, 2008, 12:49pm | #

John I'm pretty close to what would be called somewhat unfairly an "isolationist", but I'd support 100% a "surge" into Afghanistan get the bastards that did 9/11.

If we had the number of troops in Afghanistan that we have in Iraq right now I bet we could.

The nation building stuff I'm not so hot on, though.

NP | April 1, 2008, 12:51pm | #

Chuck,

I believe the actual name is Freedom's Watch (or Freedoms Watch, according to the website). Of course you knew that already... right?

Fluffy | April 1, 2008, 12:52pm | #

Jennifer the Islamofascists have made it clear they want to restore a Global Caliphate, then march on the civilized world.

And that desire is meaningless in the face of the nuclear arsenal of the United States.

There have always been Muslims who have looked back at the early years of Islam and called for a caliphate and a turn away from modernity. But they had been losing the internal culture war within Islam since the time of Attaturk if not longer.

The radical Islamists only started to win when the West decided to stomp on the throat of any Arab who got out of line with regard to Israel. "Moderate" Islam was discredited by humiliation after humiliation being delivered to it by Israel and the West.

If we leave now, if we don't finish the job, Al Qaeda and Iran and the other Islamofascists will crow to the world that they defeated America, that America is weak and decadent and that they can defeat us anywhere. Is that what you want?

I don't really care what they "crow" one way or the other. Propaganda victories are meaningless to everyone who isn't a fucking emotional juvenile.

The fiscal, economic, military, and human costs we are incurring in Iraq are real, actual costs. Your concern about what someone might "crow" is a puerile emotional concern. Faced with a choice between real, actual, hard costs and your infantile pride, I know what I choose.

Infants like you wander into ambushes and are too stupid to pull out of them, because "retreat" galls your fool's pride. I am not willing to bankrupt the nation and send men to die so that George Bush can avoid admitting that he got suckered into overcommitting on the ground in the Middle East.

kingfisher | April 1, 2008, 12:54pm | #

Neil,

As I'm sure you know, Muslims have sought to establish Islamic empires for millenia. Heck, they even had Spain, once!

Somehow, Judaeo-Christian ethics and philosophy was able to survive that last great incursion, and did so without the US military!!!

Also, you warn that "Al Qaeda and Iran... will crow to the world that they defeated America..."

I'm sorry, but that doesn't exactly equate to "WORLD TAKEOVER IMMANENT!!!!!!!!!"

you'll have to fear-monger a little harder to convince me.

TallDave | April 1, 2008, 12:56pm | #

This is mostly a moot issue. We won't go to war with Iran, and no matter who's elected we aren't going to abandon Iraq precipitously.

If we had the number of troops in Afghanistan that we have in Iraq right now I bet we could.

There are reasons we never sent 100,000 troops into Afghanistan, and they have nothing to do with Iraq. One, the logistics are a nightmare (most stuff comes in by helo); it might cost as much as a trillion a year to supply them. Two, there are no large concentrations of enemies sitting in one place to fight, so 90% of the troops would end up just sitting around. Three, the terrain is such that insurgents can sucessfully hide indefinitely.

The Soviets tried the massive brute force approach there and bankrupted their empire.

Jennifer | April 1, 2008, 12:58pm | #

Jennifer the Islamofascists have made it clear they want to restore a Global Caliphate, then march on the civilized world.

And Professor Chaos has made it clear he wants to bring apocalyptic catastrophe down upon South Park and thenceforth the world. I'm still not losing any sleep over it.

Reinmoose | April 1, 2008, 12:58pm | #

Neil,
Are you like, a parody or something?

Mutts | April 1, 2008, 12:58pm | #

the Islamofascists have made it clear they want to restore a Global Caliphate, then march on the civilized world.

A few observations:

-By that standard, there are only a small handful of Islamofascists. There are many more Islamo-nationalists whose thinking goes no further than their own borders.

-Caliphate means something like Papacy. Is this why you're worried?

-If the caliphate were global, what would be left to march on? Mars? Is that why you're worried?

-To develop a caliphate, there already would have to be a civilization (or one would be formed by the very act of instituting a caliphate). In either case, you'd have a degree of conflict between civilizations - not between the civilized and the uncivilized.

Sorry, I don't buy it.

John | April 1, 2008, 1:00pm | #

John I'm pretty close to what would be called somewhat unfairly an "isolationist", but I'd support 100% a "surge" into Afghanistan get the bastards that did 9/11.

If we had the number of troops in Afghanistan that we have in Iraq right now I bet we could.

The nation building stuff I'm not so hot on, though."

I am convinced Bin Ladin is dead. I think we have gotten the actual guys responsible for 9-11. We are left with nation building in Afghanistan to make sure that ones in the future don't make it a base and attack it again. We are at a wierd crossroads in that we have pretty much snuffed out those directly responsible for 9-11 but the ideology responsible lives on. How do we fight the ideology without giving people an alternative via nation building or at the very least deny adherents a safe haven?

pinko | April 1, 2008, 1:00pm | #

Jennifer,
That was pretty cool. It's like you knew when you pressed that button something about islamofascism would ooze out, but you pushed it anyway. It makes me wonder what other buttons Neil has.

Robert | April 1, 2008, 1:00pm | #

We have months ahead of us to straighten out the misimpression that one or the other side of the like-minded have about McCain on foreign & military affairs. Think it will be clarified?
Obama has come out and said the same thing about increasing the size of the military.
Seems like consensus on the subject by the establishment. Possibly a manifestation of Lobagola's law, a rebound against the last movement, which was to decrease the military's size.

Fluffy | April 1, 2008, 1:01pm | #

Oh, and to answer the question about McCain:

People project on to him that he's the anti-Bush, because he ran against Bush before. The average voter completely ignored McCain's 5 year quest to transform himself into another Bush brother.

And any effort to convince the voters that McCain isn't a maverick who will turn over all existing Bush policies based on, you know, the truth, can't be heard over the airwaves over the slurping sound coming from John King and everyone else at CNN as they suck on McCain's dick as loudly as possible, all day every day.

Cesar | April 1, 2008, 1:02pm | #

John if hes dead why do all these videos and audio tapes come out where he talks about very recent events? It seems to me Zawahiri and bin Laden are still alive, along with that little "American" Al Qaeda twit (I forget his name).

The leader of the Taliban, Mullah Omar, is still out there as well.

Cesar | April 1, 2008, 1:06pm | #

Tall Dave, our military in 2008 is ten thousand times as capable as the Soviet military in the 1980s. The Soviet conventional forces were a joke by that point.

For a "surge" supporter you sure seem to like the Rumsfeldian idea of a "light footprint" in Afghanistan. It doesn't work, though. Powell had it right--when you go, use overwhelming force.

Fluffy | April 1, 2008, 1:07pm | #

How do we fight the ideology without giving people an alternative via nation building or at the very least deny adherents a safe haven?

The "safe haven" thing has always been a non sequitur.

A 9/11 scale attack was well within the capabilities of historical terrorist groups that did not have "safe havens". The Red Brigades could have pulled it off, if they had the desire. The Basques could pull it off even now. They just don't want to conduct a 9/11 attack. The resources needed were pathetic.

The problem with our response to date has been that we have validated the claims of the very ideology we want to defeat. When faced with an opponent who claims that the US wants to conquer and recolonize all of Islam, that the US kidnaps and tortures, that the US only pretends to care about human rights when it's in its interest to do so, etc., it's hard to see how the Bush strategy of taking all of those claims and making them true is supposed to win the war on terror.

John | April 1, 2008, 1:09pm | #

Cesar,

We are not sure that voice on those tapes is really Bin Ladin. If Bin Ladin is still alive it is a tremendous propaganda coup for Al Quada. If he were alive and healthy, I don't see why they wouldn't be making videos of him holding today's NYT and giving the fingure to the great Satan.

TallDave | April 1, 2008, 1:11pm | #

the Islamofascists have made it clear they want to restore a Global Caliphate

Of course it's very very very unlikely they can succeed in that endeavour, but as with their megalomaniacal forebears in Japan, Germany, Russia, and China, they can cause humanity a lot of problems on their way to failure.

Islamists did seize Iran, held onto Afghanistan until we kicked them out, and made a run at Sunni Iraq before making themselves so unpopular the Sunni Arabs turned to us for help tossing them out.

Our main challenges now are to turn off the spigot of oil wealth that funds them, and give Arabs the breathing room in which to reject violent religious ideologies.

John | April 1, 2008, 1:15pm | #

"When faced with an opponent who claims that the US wants to conquer and recolonize all of Islam, that the US kidnaps and tortures, that the US only pretends to care about human rights when it's in its interest to do so, etc., it's hard to see how the Bush strategy of taking all of those claims and making them true is supposed to win the war on terror"
It is also a US not to be screwed with. A lot of what drove Al Quada to 9-11 was the belief that the US was weak and would give up once we had a few casualties. Bin Ladin had a plan for 9-11. It wasn't just to kill people. His goal is to throw out the Saudi Royal family and destroy Israel. The US is the biggest obstacle to that. In Bin Ladin's mind, the US was defined by Somalia where we cut and ran after taking 18 casualties. He honestly thought that once we took big casualties at home that the US would abandon the US. If he had actually known what would happen, I really wonder if Bin Ladin would have done 9-11. Also, Bin Ladin got a huge amount of propaganda out of US troops being in Saudi Arabia. If we hadn't invaded Iraq, we would still have 1000s of people in Saudi Arabia and Bin Ladin would just have more propaganda value for it. The bottomline is that weakness emboldens and creates more converts for Bin Ladin than invasions ever will. Whatever the reasons for not invading Iraq, strengthening Bin Ladin really isn't one of them.

TallDave | April 1, 2008, 1:18pm | #

There's a milblog at Slate, and the other day I read a fascinating and telling entry from one of our soldiers there. He has a long talk with a native Afghan about freedom of religion, specifically the Afghan who had converted to Christianity and had to flee the country because Afghans wanted to kill him. The native agrees he should have been killed, and the American soldier explains this makes us very angry because we believe very strongly that people should be allowed to make their own decisions about what to believe.

At the end, the Afghan expresses great surprise (and interest) in this novel idea that people should not have beliefs forced on them.

That's the primary war we're really fighting: a war on simple ignorance. We take freedom for granted, but a lot of Islamists and their supporters just have no exposure to the concept.

Cesar | April 1, 2008, 1:18pm | #

But now people (McCain included) are talking about permanent bases in Iraq, which is just as much of a propaganda tool for bin Laden (and Shiite extremists as well given the holy cities there).

Seems like trading one problem for another to me.

TallDave | April 1, 2008, 1:25pm | #

As an addenedum to the last:

Enlightenment values are not peculiarly Christian or Western values. They are universal truths that all people embrace once they grasp them. That's why "Western" practices have been so successful in places like Japan, Taiwan, and South Korea.

The Islamic Enlightenment is well underway. We just need to help it along, as gently as possible, by disempowering those who seek to preserve an oppressive status quo.

Cesar | April 1, 2008, 1:30pm | #

The kind of democracy practiced in East Asia is a different kind than western democracy.

Ex., in Japan theres more emphasis on stability and consensus than competition between parties. Thats why they had what amounted to one-party rule (the LDP) there for so long after the war.

Even during a deep recession, they still gave them a plurality (!) of the seats in Parliament, something that would never be done in Europe.

joe | April 1, 2008, 1:31pm | #

If he had actually known what would happen, I really wonder if Bin Ladin would have done 9-11.

Then why did they kill Ahmed Masood Shah, the leaer of the Northern Alliance, two days earlier?

They thought they could sucker us into Afghanistan and humiliate us there, but they were wrong.

Fortunately for them, we gave them another bite at the apple in Iraq, and it worked.

Next time, how about we consider what might happen if things don't go well BEFORE we start a war?

joe | April 1, 2008, 1:35pm | #

The Islamic Enlightenment is well underway.

And was well underway before we invaded anyone.

We just need to help it along, as gently as possible, by disempowering those who seek to preserve an oppressive status quo.

First, do no harm. It is possible to discredit that enlightenment, and discredit ourselves. See Abu Ghraib.

Traders and students spread ideas better than soldiers.

R C Dean | April 1, 2008, 1:37pm | #

Fortunately for them, we gave them another bite at the apple in Iraq, and it worked.

joe, I guess you missed the memo.

AQ in Iraq is basically a spent force. They bet the farm there, and lost (unless, of coure, we pull out too early).

The major security problem in Iraq now is the Iranian-backed Shia militias, not AQ.

Fluffy | April 1, 2008, 1:42pm | #

A lot of what drove Al Quada to 9-11 was the belief that the US was weak and would give up once we had a few casualties.

Well, at least you're starting to see that the intent of the 9/11 provocation was to get us to commit ground troops to combat in the Middle East.

I think that bin Laden didn't want the US to take a few casualties and leave. I think bin Laden expected to be able to repeat the defeat of the Soviet Union in Afghanistan - we were supposed to commit to a war there and stay in place and be attrited. We were supposed to go bankrupt, break our army and destroy its espirit de corps, diplomatically isolate ourselves, and discredit every Muslim who allied himself with us - the same as the Soviets did. That didn't end up being how Afghanistan went down, so he didn't get his wish - but as Joe points out, we managed to give him what he wanted in the end anyway, just in Iraq instead.

It is also a US not to be screwed with.

And this is a good summary for why the war on terror is failing. We will not win a competition of atrocities and it undermines us to even try.

It's also a good summary why we should laugh in the face of anyone who tells us [as McCain does] that staying in Iraq is a matter of "honor". This is not how honorable men think or behave.

prolefeed | April 1, 2008, 2:03pm | #

I know I'll regret asking this, but ... in this analogy of yours, who is playing the role of Hitler, determined and quite able to take over a good chunk of the civilized world?

Jennifer -- if by "take over" you mean "successfully topple the existing government and then end the subsequent insurgency, leading to parades with the grateful populace strewing rose petals and not IEDs for the conquerers" then the answer would be "nobody is playing that role"

But, great snark!

joe | April 1, 2008, 2:14pm | #

I didn't miss any memo, RC. You and al Qaeda have been teaming up for years declaring that our upcoming withdrawal will be a major humiliation for the United States, and a victory for the jihad.

Don't worry, along with the rest of the world, I've gotten your (plural) message loud and clear.

Bart | April 1, 2008, 2:36pm | #

I wonder if Carey locks his doors.

Robert | April 1, 2008, 2:40pm | #

And any effort to convince the voters that McCain isn't a maverick who will turn over all existing Bush policies based on, you know, the truth, can't be heard over the airwaves over the slurping sound coming from John King and everyone else at CNN as they suck on McCain's dick as loudly as possible, all day every day.
But they could suck anyone's dick they wanted. Why do they choose his?

jasa | April 1, 2008, 2:43pm | #

"joe, I guess you missed the memo.

AQ in Iraq is basically a spent force. They bet the farm there, and lost..."

RC, you missed the point.

AQ is just a band of thugs with revenge on their mind. That they were able to cause a billion dollars of damage on US soil is bad enough. We then double down in Iraq, trying to install Democracy 1.0 in a land that ain't interested. We're well on our way to spending a trillion dollars for this fools errand, not to mention the blood loss. Regardless of how many hundreds of AQ gangsters we've killed, what passes for the current AQ leadership has got to be walking around each day with a perma-grin plastered to their faces.
Assuming that we aren't making new AQ recruits faster than we kill them, even if we kill every last one of the AQ in Iraq, the US still lost, big time.

Fluffy | April 1, 2008, 2:49pm | #

Robert, there are many theories as to why they chose McCain's. Welch has his own theory. There is an Atriotic theory. There is a Rockwellian theory.

Or maybe John King just likes crazy old guy dick.

Jennifer | April 1, 2008, 2:57pm | #

But they could suck anyone's dick they wanted. Why do they choose his?

Perhaps he's operating on the assumption "if you absolutely MUST suck dick in order to keep the country safe, flaccid old-guy dick is less likely to suffocate you than firm, virile, young dick." You know, because the former is too squishy to block your windpipe or anything.

D.A. Ridgely | April 1, 2008, 3:29pm | #

Perhaps he's operating on the assumption "if you absolutely MUST suck dick in order to keep the country safe, flaccid old-guy dick is less likely to suffocate you than firm, virile, young dick." You know, because the former is too squishy to block your windpipe or anything.

[insert geezer's 4 hr. Viagra erection joke here]

John McCain | April 1, 2008, 3:49pm | #

VIVAAAAA VIAGRA!

TallDave | April 1, 2008, 4:01pm | #

They thought they could sucker us into Afghanistan and humiliate us there, but they were wrong.

They believed we would throw a few missiles at them and then give up, as Clinton had done for 8 years. AQ did not realize that even before 9/11 Bush was already asking for a plan that would destroy them rather than merely retaliate.

Fortunately for them, we gave them another bite at the apple in Iraq, and it worked.

If by "worked" you mean discredited AQ among a sympathetic audience that, once exposed, so hated their ways that they asked for our help in driving them out.

Again, AQ underestimated Bush. He did not give up when the war started polling badly.

TallDave | April 1, 2008, 4:05pm | #

The kind of democracy practiced in East Asia is a different kind than western democracy.

True, practice differs, but the essential characteristics are free speech, free assembly, and free elections.

The Islamic Enlightenment is well underway....And was well underway before we invaded anyone

Certainly not in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Fluffy | April 1, 2008, 4:20pm | #

Certainly not in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Actually, Ba'athism was fascistic secular Arab nationalism. Which made it pretty much the bastard offspring of the Enlightenment all the way around.

If by "worked" you mean discredited AQ among a sympathetic audience that, once exposed, so hated their ways that they asked for our help in driving them out.

You are living in a fantasy world. Are you really arguing that because a handful of Sunni sheiks in western Iraq decided they'd rather run the joint than let AQI run it, it means Al Qaeda is "discredited"?

Between the year 2000 and today, is the US more popular across the Islamic world or less? Do we have more diplomatic credibility worldwide or less?

Between the year 2000 and today, are Al Qaeda and its affiliates more popular across the Islamic world or less? Is radical Islam as a social and political movement more dangerous or less?

TallDave | April 1, 2008, 4:32pm | #

Actually, Ba'athism was fascistic secular Arab nationalism. Which made it pretty much the bastard offspring of the Enlightenment all the way around.

The Enlightenment was built on reason and freedom. The Baathists embodied neither.

Between the year 2000 and today, are Al Qaeda and its affiliates more popular across the Islamic world or less?

Support for Al Qaeda has steadily fallen since we liberated Iraq from Hussein, after 12 years of bombing and sanctions that made AQ more popular and beginning 5 years of AQ killing Iraqi civilians that made them less popular.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/07/15/MNGKCDOGV61.DTL

http://www.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/asiapcf/02/11/pakistan.opinion/index.html

Muslim pride may receive as a salve attacks on Washington, London, Madrid, and Western troops in Iraq, but car bombs massacring civilians in Baghdad do not win their affections.

R C Dean | April 1, 2008, 5:10pm | #

Between the year 2000 and today, is the US more popular across the Islamic world or less?

I wouldn't have any idea. I wouldn't even know how to find out, opinion polling in the Islamic world being what it is. I'm not even sure it matters in the short run, the irrelevancy of public opinion to the major insitutions of the Islamic world being what it is.

Do we have more diplomatic credibility worldwide or less?

That's actually a better question than you know. I wouldn't assume that our "credibility" has been damaged by our willingness to stick with our commitments in Iraq despite obstacles and setbacks.

I'm pretty sure our credibility will take a huge hit if we pull out too fast and the whole area goes pear-shaped.

jasa | April 1, 2008, 5:13pm | #

"Again, AQ underestimated Bush. He did not give up when the war started polling badly."

Yeah, I'll bet that AQ just laughed a little louder when they realized they underestimated his stupidity.

"Support for Al Qaeda has steadily fallen since we liberated Iraq from Hussein..."

And that makes this war SO worth it.

Too bad my brethren in Redmond have made pc's so easy that even a talldoofus can drive one.

Fluffy | April 1, 2008, 6:16pm | #

The Enlightenment was built on reason and freedom. The Baathists embodied neither.

A subsection of the Enlightenment was built on those concepts. But the Enlightenment also produced nationalism, and utopian political schemes including socialism [which has always regarded itself as "scientific"] and fascism.

That means that a political party that advances secularism, nationalism and a nebulous quasi-socialism, quasi-fascism does in fact have its roots in the Enlightenment.

You have to realize that a broad term like "the Enlightenment" cannot be defined as "ideas I like" or "ideas that led to my own individual set of political beliefs". There was actually much in the Enlightenment project that left a lot to be desired. After all, Rousseau was part of the Enlightenment, and half the shit that went wrong in the 20th century is his fault pretty much personally.

Mack Blessen | April 1, 2008, 6:58pm | #

Was it not FDR who said that he "hated war," in the middle of a speech advocating intervention in World War II?

joe | April 1, 2008, 7:11pm | #

TallDave writes,

They (al Qaeda) believed we would throw a few missiles at them [in Afghanistan} and then give up, as Clinton had done for 8 years.

The fact that they coordinated the assassination of the head of the Northern Alliance with 9/11 suggests otherwise. As does the long record of bin Laden talking about Afghanistan as the graveyard of Empires, and his desire to get us bogged down in a war there.

If by "worked" you mean discredited AQ among a sympathetic audience that, once exposed, so hated their ways that they asked for our help in driving them out. Most Iraqis hated al Qaeda and foreign jihadists before this war, and now, a less smaller majority feels that way. Since there was no al Qaeda operating in Iraq - since they were, in fact, at war with that regime and had no presence there before we invaded - the fact that we've almost-but-not-quite managed to clean up the al Qaeda mess we created there hasn't discredited them among anyone.

It did, however, allow them to kill more Americans than 9/11, while serving as what our own intelligence agencies describe as a massive recruiting video for al Qaeda both in Iraq, and throughout the Muslim world.

The Enlightenment was built on reason and freedom. The Baathists embodied neither. Neither did the Jacobins. Do you know who they were, TallDave?

Support for Al Qaeda has steadily fallen since we liberated Iraq from Hussein... Sure. That must explain why they went from not having a presence before the war to being able to operate with impunity in Sunni areas throughout Iraq, at one point after our invasion. Once again, it's nice that we've almost cleaned up that mess we made, but it would been better not to make it in the first place.

Kolohe | April 1, 2008, 8:42pm | #

On Asia Democracies:

I'm bullish on these as much as anyone, but keep in mind that if you were eligible to vote for either Bush I or Clinton I, you have probably voted in more 'fair and free' elections than anyone in this region outside of Japan.

Snarky Moose | April 2, 2008, 8:41am | #

"Support for Al Qaeda has steadily fallen since we liberated Iraq from Hussein."

kausation/korrelation.

DEMAND KURV! DEMAND KURV!

what a freakin putz.

john | April 2, 2008, 10:23am | #

John McCain represents the worst of all worlds. He's a combination of Al Gore and George Bush, an enviro crazy who wants to shut down the western world as we know it and invade everything and everybody else. If elected he'll make George Bush's presidency look like a resounding success.