December 18, 2006
Person Of The Year: Ahmadinejad
By
Patrick J. Buchanan
Since 1927, the year Lindbergh flew the Atlantic in
his single-engine
Spirit of St. Louis, Time has
devoted its final cover of the year to the Man of
the Year. The Lone Eagle was first.
In the 1930s and 1940s, FDR was the Man of the Year
three Times.
Stalin, Truman and Churchill made it twice, though
the selection of Churchill in 1949 seems dubious, as he
had been out of power four years, while Mao was seizing
China by the throat in the
bloodiest revolution of the century.
Hitler was chosen in the year of Anschluss and
Munich, 1938. Gen. Marshall made it twice, as did Ike,
in 1944 as victor of Normandy and, 15 years later, as
president.
In the 1960s and 1970s,
JFK made it once,
LBJ and
Nixon twice. Nixon's 1972 designation was shared
with
Henry Kissinger. In 1979, the dark and brooding face
gracing Time's cover was that of Iran's
Ayatollah Khomeini.
And Time got it right. For Time's Man
of the Year, now
Person of the Year, is the figure who, for good or
evil, dominates the news. Yet this year Time
could not bring itself to name the obvious choice.
Instead, it
chose
you and
me, all of us citizens of the digital democracy who
create on the Worldwide Web. Why
the copout?
Perhaps it was Ahmadinejad's hosting of a conference
of Holocaust skeptics, including David Duke, that caused
Time to recoil. Perhaps it was fear that the face
of the Iranian president on the cover of Time
would repel the American people and be death for sales.
Surely that was the reasoning behind Time's
refusal to name Osama bin Laden in 2001, choosing Rudy
Giuliani instead, though history is unlikely to
conclude that Rudy, his crowded hour notwithstanding,
was the central figure of
that annus horribilis.
Richard Stengel, editor of Time, as much as
concedes he could not bring himself to choose by the
traditional standard, if that meant choosing Ahmadinejad:
"It just felt to me a little off selecting him."
Understandably. But the refusal to select Ahmadinejad
reveals an unwillingness to confront hard truths. For
putting his face on Time's cover would have done
a useful service, jolting America to a painful
realization. Not only George Bush, but the United
States, its Arab allies and Israel, had a dreadful year,
as Iran emerged as first beneficiary of a war fought by
this country at a cost of 25,000 dead and wounded.
What the choice of Ahmadinejad would have said is
that Iran is in the ascendancy in the Middle East and it
is not inconceivable that the United States is headed
for defeat, not only in Iraq but
Afghanistan.
The Taliban have come back. The Pakistanis have ceded
them sanctuary. Some NATO nations are refusing to risk
troops in combat. And it has been some time since
guerrillas who enjoyed a privileged sanctuary in that
part of the world failed to expel European soldiers
perceived as imperial occupiers.
Islamists control Somalia. Anti-Americanism is
rampant in Lebanon—after Condi Rice
blocked a U.N. ceasefire resolution to stop Israel's
bombing last summer in what was supposed to be a
campaign to clear
Hezbollah from her northern border. The Beirut
government could fall at any moment or be forced into a
coalition with Hezbollah.
Even Bush's defense secretary concedes we are not
winning in Iraq. It may take a "surge" of 20,000
to 40,000 troops to stave off defeat before the end of
Bush's term. On the West Bank and Gaza, Hamas and Fatah
appear on the brink of civil war. The elections Bush
demanded produced dramatic gains for the
Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, Hezbollah in Lebanon,
Hamas in Palestine and Moqtada al-Sadr in Iraq.
Eighteen months ago, Ahmadinejad was the unknown
mayor of Tehran. Today, he is the visible face of
anti-Americanism and anti-Zionism, both a cause of and
the personification of our failures. He has defied
Bush's demand that he give up the enrichment of uranium,
split the Security Council, mocked the Holocaust, called
for the end of the Zionist state and the expulsion of
America from the Mideast, terrified the Sunni monarchs,
and united the Arab and Islamic masses behind his
defiance.
His trip to the United Nations, where he ran circles
around U.S. journalists, was a diplomatic triumph. And
he has done it all not with military power—Iran would
not last a week in an all-out war with the United States
and has no defense against Israel's nuclear weapons—but
with theatrics and rhetoric.
He inspires all who hate Israel and Bush's America.
And, according to the Zogby polling today, that is a
majority which, in some once-friendly nations, is
approaching near unanimity.
Ahmadinejad, a man of words without real power, is
the big winner of 2006, because Bush, America and Israel
were the big losers.
Why do a billion Muslims prefer Ahmadinejad to
America? That is the question that needs to be
addressed.
Patrick J. Buchanan needs
no introduction to VDARE.COM
readers; his book
State of Emergency: The Third World Invasion and
Conquest of America,
can be ordered from
Amazon.com.