Is Neoconservatism Dead?
The Bush administration may be in a tail-spin but neo-conservatism will survive because it feeds on deeply-rooted fears.
Neo-conservatism has served as a badge of unity for those in the Bush administration advocating an aggressive foreign policy, massive military spending, disdain for international law and institutions, an assault on the welfare state, and a return to "traditional values". So, with the Bush era winding down in a tailspin of plummeting popularity and high-level resignations, has the neoconservative movement, too, run its course?
Neoconservatism began with different premises from traditional forms of conservatism. Because reforms can become part of "our" heritage, traditional conservatives can adapt to change, even taking credit for negotiating the connection between past and future. By contrast, neoconservatism's adherents are unconcerned with what Edmund Burke called the ties that bind "the dead, the living, and the yet unborn". On the contrary, they are revolutionaries or, rather, "counter-revolutionaries" intent upon remaking America and the world.
Indeed, in a certain sense, Irving Kristol, Norman Podhoretz, and other neo-conservative elder statesmen remain defined by the communist dogmatism they sought to oppose when they were youthful Trotskyists. The virtue of their "party" or clique needs no complex justification: it stands for "American values," while critics merely provide an "objective apology" for the "enemies of freedom".
Until the 1960s, future neoconservatives shared the Democratic party's vehement anti-communism, acceptance of the civil rights movement, and support for President Franklin Roosevelt's New Deal welfare-state policies. Tellingly, the influential neoconservative Richard Perle said in 2003 that he was still a registered Democrat, out of "nostalgia" for Henry "Scoop" Jackson, the powerful former Senator who embodied these commitments.
For future neoconservatives, however, the 1960s produced a "trauma" that transcended the humiliation of a lost war and the disgrace of Richard Nixon. What in the 1950s had seemingly been a culture of contentment was transformed into what Podhoretz called an "adversary culture". New social movements, seeking to de-mythologise history, rejecting platitudes justifying the policies of elite interests, and demanding greater institutional accountability, seemingly threatened the entire "establishment".
Nevertheless, it was not until Ronald Reagan forged an alliance between conservatism's two traditionally warring factions that the political foundations of neoconservatism's triumph were secured.
One faction primarily comprised elites opposed to state intervention in the market. Its members cared little about the verities associated with "community" or "family values". Their best intellectual arguments derived from Milton Friedman, Friedrich von Hayek, and Robert Nozick, who sought to challenge collectivist theories of society in general and "socialism" in particular.
The other faction was rooted in 19th-century "know nothing" populism, with its flights of nationalist hysteria, defence of traditional prejudices, and resentment of intellectual and economic elites. However, its members do not necessarily oppose social legislation that benefits working people - especially when white workers are privileged - and some even retain a positive image of the New Deal.
Neoconservatism thus cannot be reduced to advocacy of the free market or rightwing populism, since its ideological specificity consists in the fusion of these contradictory outlooks. The question was how to package elites' interest in free-market capitalism with the provincial temperament of a parochial constituency.
What sold best was an image of oppressive "big government", reflected in a tax system that was increasingly burdensome to ordinary people, combined with anti-communist nationalism and barely veiled racism. After all, everyone understood who the "welfare cheat" was, and who Kristol had in mind when he famously quipped that a neo-conservative is "a liberal who has been mugged by reality".
But, with the demise of communism, neoconservatism's two factions once again seemed fated to clash. Economic globalisation risked provoking a backlash by provincial populists, while the external enemy - the glue that held the neoconservative movement together - had disappeared.
Then came the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. From the beginning, senior Reagan era officials were wary of pursuing a unilateral response. It was clear to many that Islamic fundamentalism was not comparable to communism, and, particularly in Iraq, military leaders saw the dangers in stretching American forces too thin.
But their arguments did not carry the day. For the neoconservative enterprise, 9/11 helped to create a new context for linking the quest for American hegemony abroad with intense nationalism - and an even more intense assault on the welfare state - at home. Employing a crude form of "realism", which has traditionally viewed the state as the basic unit of political analysis, neoconservatives portrayed al-Qaida in terms of familiar enemies, namely fascism and communism, with backing from "rogue" states that must not be "appeased". Thus, the "axis of evil" and the "pre-emptive strike".
This new "hyper-realism" has little in common with old-style realism. Churchill and Roosevelt did not lie to the international community about the threat of fascism, construct an artificial "coalition of the willing", or employ violence without accountability: these were the tactics of their totalitarian enemies. Today, a meaningful realism calls for recognising the constraints on building democracy: suspicion of western values generated by imperialism, the power of pre-modern institutions and customs, and the still-fragile character of the state system in most of the world.
But genuine realism, unfortunately, is beside the point. Given the inherent tension implied by neoconservatism's simultaneous embrace of secular free-market capitalism and "traditional" values, its strategy, perfected since the Reagan era, has been to redraw the lines of division: then, as now, the west is "at risk" - which requires nurturing a strongly emotional distinction between "us" and "them".
That strategy's popular appeal will not end with the Bush administration, because neoconservatism feeds on a set of public fears that are deeply rooted in American history. Changing that will require not merely confronting a new ideological outlook, but also deciding which policies reflect what is best about the American political tradition.
In cooperation with Project Syndicate/Institute for Human Sciences, 2007.
Stephen Eric Bronner is professor of political science at Rutgers University and author of Peace Out of Reach: Middle Eastern Travels and the Search for Reconciliation.
© 2007 The Guardian
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21 Comments so far
Show AllMr. Bronner, one can only wish.
The US is the only modern western country marching around globally like it's the early 19th century, and the only country to have used atomic weapons in war.
Of the 194 countries in the world, does Iran have every one of them in its cross-hairs? Of course not. Why does the US make the cut? Is it something we did/do, or is this a taboo question these days? Does it all boil down to capitalism/despotism, oil, and Israel?
Iran's achieving nuclear capability is indeed a clear and present danger to all nations. Hopefully Bush will not make the mistake of a unilateral attack on Iran until all attempts to gather a coalition (as we did in the first Iraq war) will be attempted.
As Bush and Co. made every possible blunder in their waging of the war in Iraq, I would think it would be far better to wait for the next administration to handle Iran and the danger it represents.
Is neoconservatism dead? The dead man asks. Pour me a glass of water and find out how the book reads. Does the bough break or just chaff in the wind? Ask me if you can. Do you know where your blueberies grow? Or can you sight a reason for infidelity? Do oranges cry in the night as sparrows fly by. Ask me if I care. If I feel the wind on the prairies?
Can a bug sin? Can a monkey repent? Iv'e got to quit drinking.
Mordechai Shiblikov,
I disagree that the predominant emotion is fear. Check out some of the literature in the field of ethology, for instance Frans de Waal's "Good Natured: The Origins of Right and Wrong". Higher primates are complex studies of various tugs between cooperation and competition. Within so-called civilization I might be willing to agree that fear goes a long way. But when humans are in their natural setting which, evolutionarily speaking for Homo sapiens, would be small hamlets, I don't think fear is the major motivator. Cooperation goes a long way in describing our species. Our megacities, right-angle offices, sprawl, artificial light, 40 hours in a cubicle, autocratic leadership, etc. is all wholly unnatural. And perhaps none of that debasement from essential freedom could exist without fear. So fear is likely a byproduct of civilization's various iron fists moreso than a cause. At least, that's my reading.
For Labor Day
Join in the battle
Wherein no man can fail
For who so fadeth and dieth
Yet his deed shall still prevail
William Morris
Asking if Neoconservatism is dead in 2007 is like asking if Nazism was dead in 1943.
It's done a lot of damage, and yes it's days are numbered, but momentum and the determination of the dangerously
powerful ensure that the catastrophe will continue for years to come.
I believe we live in a society with a Preditor model. If and when we collectively reject that model and begin to work as if the 'other' is as important as ourselves, then peace and harmony is a possibility. Do I believe that will ever happen?...pretty much just as soon as pigs fly.
The neocrazies are dead! Long live the neo-neocrazies! Because the above piece misses the real lunacies of the cult: the belief that only a select few "elites" know and understand the "real" truths and must, as their patriotic duty, lie to "the people" for they are too goddamn stupid to understand the ramblings of the mentally ill, er, I mean, the "elites." Second, the neocrazies are big, big fans of some nonsense called "creative destruction" - you know, blowin' stuff up so friends of the family can rake in the bucks rebuilding "creatively," which in their case means, basically, stealing the money and not actually rebuilding sh*t.
The neo-neo crazies - think Hillary, BO, any GOPervert candidate besides Dr. Ron Paul - believe the same self-important crap: they are so almighty, they can nuke Iran if said sovereign nation does not strap on the USInc knee pads, for example. Which is why they won't dare even mention impeaching the Loonitary Decider, because that would force them to renounce the very unAmerican power they're dreaming about getting their corrupt little hands on come Nov 08. Sure, there's plenty of talk about "helping" those who aren't obscenely wealthy, but it's just talk, designed to deflect from the counting of the corporate blood money.
It's time we all stop falling for all the cons of these neo-cons. Firstly, the word neoconservative itself is a lie -- effectively this group promotes nationalism to hide the goals of further enriching the rich. Nationalistic propoganda combined with increasing support for big business (especially 'defense' business) sounds much more like a fascist agenda. From this time forward, I think we should never use the word 'neoconservative' again but call the neo-cons by a better name:
Neo-Fascists
One day you will all learn that the only way to fight back is with a socialist revolution...molotov cocktail, anyone?
The fear is, of course, geared to consumption. Remember the instructions to go buy duct tape after 9/11? Which one of the neocons own stock in the company that makes duct tape. And, don't fret, go shopping. Shopping is certainly a fear stopper. Yellow alert: spend a little, Orange alert: spend a lot, Red alert: Go for broke. As for Democrats, they are not going to even slap the hands of this president. He has laid the golden egg for the presidency and they all want it kept that way. All of that executive power accumulated will come in very handy for whomever becomes the next president. They will be able to say and do whatever takes their fancy and they know there will be no accountability.
Countless sages throughout history have pointed out that the predominant human emotion is fear. Neoconservatives understand that . . . and the Democratic party doesn't. There is such a thing as progress but it moves like a glacier. While progress inches along unseen, fear moves like a race car. Neoconservatives play to this. They sweat and beat their chests. Democrats, confronted by this moronic display of bravado, wilt and then cave completely. When it really counts, they refuse to call neoconservative fear mongering what it is. Hence their constant caving to Bush. The hell with them. The next president will probably be another Republican imbecile like the incumbent.
adrien, rumsfeld, rice, wolfowitz, rove, and gonzales are not gone. they have just gone behind the curtains. they are still in business. the neo cons are the new republicans just like the neo liberals are the new democrats. take a look at The Necessary Embrace of Conspiracy by Robert Shetterly or How Did We Get Into This Neoliberal Mess? by George Monbiot. both on common dreams. even the articleThe American Tragedy of Our Troops Held Hostage by Glenn W. Smith. each in their own way point out that this is a struggle over values, which are they same for everybody, and how we choose the express them.
From a Thursday, August 30, 2007 entry on Informed Comment Global Affairs, a group blog run by Juan Cole, Manan Ahmed, Farideh Farhi, and Barnett R. Rubin
On September 7, 2002, The New York Times White House correspondent Elizabeth Bushmiller treated readers to an explanation of how the Bush administration planned to sell the invasion of Iraq:
White House officials said today that the administration was following a meticulously planned strategy to persuade the public, the Congress and the allies of the need to confront the threat from Saddam Hussein.
The rollout of the strategy this week, they said, was planned long before President Bush's vacation in Texas last month. It was not hastily concocted, they insisted, after some prominent Republicans began to raise doubts about moving against Mr. Hussein and administration officials made contradictory statements about the need for weapons inspectors in Iraq.
The White House decided, they said, that even with the appearance of disarray it was still more advantageous to wait until after Labor Day to kick off their plan.
"From a marketing point of view," said Andrew H. Card Jr., the White House chief of staff who is coordinating the effort, "you don't introduce new products in August."
A centerpiece of the strategy, White House officials said, is to use Mr. Bush's speech on Sept. 11 to help move Americans toward support of action against Iraq, which could come early next year.
This September 11, we will have the reports from General David Petraeus and Ambassador Ryan Crocker, filtered through a White House drafted report.
I watched Vice-President Cheney's speech to the Veterans of Foreign Wars on August 26, 2002, in the residence where I was staying in Kabul, Afghanistan. I heard Cheney deliver his famous falsehood:
The Iraqi regime has in fact been very busy enhancing its capabilities in the field of chemical and biological agents. And they continue to pursue the nuclear program they began so many years ago. These are not weapons for the purpose of defending Iraq; these are offensive weapons for the purpose of inflicting death on a massive scale, developed so that Saddam can hold the threat over the head of anyone he chooses, in his own region or beyond.
We know the results.
This year, on August 28, President Bush spoke to another veterans' group, the American Legion. He called Iran "the world's leading state sponsor of terrorism," whose "active pursuit of technology that could lead to nuclear weapons threatens to put a region already known for instability and violence under the shadow of a nuclear holocaust." He concluded:
Iran's actions threaten the security of nations everywhere. And that is why the United States is rallying friends and allies around the world to isolate the regime, to impose economic sanctions. We will confront this danger before it is too late.
But this apparently is just test marketing, like Cheney's 2002 speech. After all "from a marketing point of view, you don't introduce new products in August." Today I received a message from a friend who has excellent connections in Washington and whose information has often been prescient. According to this report, as in 2002, the rollout will start after Labor Day, with a big kickoff on September 11. My friend had spoken to someone in one of the leading neo-conservative institutions. He summarized what he was told this way:
They [the source's institution] have "instructions" (yes, that was the word used) from the Office of the Vice-President to roll out a campaign for war with Iran in the week after Labor Day; it will be coordinated with the American Enterprise Institute, the Wall Street Journal, the Weekly Standard, Commentary, Fox, and the usual suspects. It will be heavy sustained assault on the airwaves, designed to knock public sentiment into a position from which a war can be maintained. Evidently they don't think they'll ever get majority support for this–they want something like 35-40 percent support, which in their book is "plenty."
Of course I cannot verify this report. But besides all the other pieces of information about this circulating, I heard last week from a former U.S. government contractor. According to this friend, someone in the Department of Defense called, asking for cost estimates for a model for reconstruction in Asia. The former contractor finally concluded that the model was intended for Iran. This anecdote is also inconclusive, but it is consistent with the depth of planning that went into the reconstruction effort in Iraq and Afghanistan.
I hesitated before posting this. I don't want to spread alarmist rumors. I don't want to lessen the pressure on the Ahmadinejad government in Tehran. But there are too many signs of another irresponsible military adventure from the Cheney-Bush administration for me just to dismiss these reports. I am putting them into the public sphere in the hope of helping to mobilize opposition to a policy that would further doom the efforts in Afghanistan and Iraq and burden our country and the people of the Middle East with yet another unstoppable fountain of bloodshed
The Neo-Con, close to 'three-card monte', but global.
It's time for a new deal!
the neo cons are apparently here to stay - rumsfeld, rice, wolfowitz, rove, ashcroft are gone. but the the deafening silence from pelosi and the democrats shows an acceptence for this new style of government.
in texas a man has just had a death sentence commuted to a life sentence. his crime was to sit by while somebody commited a crime.
Maybe when they can no longer pay at the Gas pump they will wake up and stop being sheepill! They love to be led by the nose over that CLIFF.... I think they love being lied to, it is easy for them to follow, rather then lead.
Oh and when we do attack Iran which looks like a tragic inevitability gas prices will go through the roof.
The only thing we need to fear is Neo Con Men.
Mr. Bonner last time I checked it is alive and kicking and dragging us into endless wars in the Middle East-Iran is next.