January 02, 2004
A Recipe For Tyranny
Paul Craig Roberts
THE TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT
AMERICA THE VIRTUOUS. Crisis of democracy and the
quest for empire. By Claes G. Ryn. 240pp. Transaction.
$34.95. - 0 76580 219 8
Why did President George W. Bush
abandon US multilateralism of the post-Second World War
era? Why did he turn his back on his promise during his
presidential campaign for a more humble foreign policy,
eschewing "nation-building"? The superficial answer is
the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on New York
City and Washington, DC.
These attacks gave Bush's political
handler, Karl Rove, the opportunity to rescue the
President from the controversy surrounding his election
by wrapping him in the flag. The real answer, according
to
Professor Claes G. Ryn in America the Virtuous:
Crisis of democracy and the quest
for empire, is the rise of a new Jacobin ideology, which
has captured the Bush administration and formerly
conservative media, such as the Wall Street Journal
editorial page, National Review, the Washington Times
and Fox News.
Known to the world as neo-conservativism,
this ideology is radical, not conservative.
It appears to be conservative
because, unlike cultural Marxists who find endless
social and moral vices in American values and
institutions, neo-conservatives find virtue.
Neo-conservatives make universal
claims for American principles.
For example, Allan Bloom in
The Closing of the American Mind wrote:
"When
we Americans speak
seriously about politics, we mean that our
principles of freedom and equality and the rights based
on them are rational and everywhere applicable.
World
War II was really an educational project undertaken to
force those who did not accept these principles to do
so".
President Bush sounded the
neo-conservative note when he
declared:
"There
is a value system that cannot be compromised, and that
is the values we praise.
And if
the values are good enough for our people, they ought to
be good enough for others".
The claim of universality gives
American principles a monopoly on virtue, which makes
the ideology militant, since with the monopoly comes an
obligation to remake the world in the American image.
Those who resist the imposition of
virtue do so because they are "evil".
It becomes America's purpose and
responsibility to rid the world of evil.
As President Bush
sees it, "Our responsibility to history is
already clear: to answer these attacks and rid the world
of evil".
But, as Ryn argues, "a
monopolistic ideological universalism that scorns
historically formed societies is a potential source of
unending war and great disasters".
Neo-conservatives do not appreciate
or understand Western civilization as a human
achievement resulting from centuries of struggle to
create moral character.
Self-restraint, empathy and mutual
respect are necessary for pluralistic societies.
Neo-Jacobin morality, however, is
divorced from moral character, personal conduct and the
civilized treatment of others, instead expressing itself
in benevolent sentiments toward abstractions.
Human diversity is not a value
comparable to
"making the world safe for democracy" or
"liberating women from the Muslim yoke".
Neo-Jacobin morality seeks to
achieve a uniform unipolar world; and, as the
neo-conservative Ben Wattenberg put it: "Remember
this about American Purpose: a unipolar world is fine,
if America is the uni".
The neo-conservative monopoly on
virtue melds with the American superpower's monopoly on
power to imbue neo-conservatives with enormous
self-confidence.
Writing in Time magazine (March
5, 2001), Charles Krauthammer
declared:
"America is no mere international citizen.
It is
the dominant power in the world, more dominant than any
since Rome.
Accordingly, America is in a position to reshape norms,
alter expectations and create new realities. How? By
unapologetic and implacable demonstrations of will".
Krauthammer's declaration that
"the US can reshape, indeed remake, reality on its own"
is nothing short of megalomaniacal.
Ryn argues that Americans across
the political spectrum find aspects of the neo-Jacobin
message attractive without understanding where it leads.
The neo-Jacobin quest for American
world supremacy appeals to nationalistic patriots, to
conservatives who bemoan "value-relativism", to
liberals imbued with a sense of government purpose, to
leftists who like the stress on revolution, to macho
types whose response to September 11 is to "kick
butt", to people fearful of terrorist plots, to
global business and financial interests, to do-gooders
anxious to spread democracy and women's rights, and to
people who enjoy power and success vicariously, like
fans of champion sports teams.
But what many regard as a necessary
or remedial dose of national assertiveness is, Ryn
argues, the beginning of an imposition of ideological
unity demanded by abstract righteousness.
Neo-conservatives have demonstrated
coercive tendencies (and a belief in their moral
superiority) by their attempts to preempt debate and to
silence critics of the US invasion of Iraq.
Writing in The American
Conservative (December
1), a new magazine attempting to provide a
conservative challenge to neo-conservatism, Doug Bandow,
a syndicated columnist and former special assistant to
President Ronald Reagan, described the vitriol
"routinely spewed by conservatives when I argued against
war with Iraq over the last year.
Conservative papers stopped
running my column; conservative Web sites removed it
from their archives".
Bandow's use of "conservative"
suggests that he underappreciates the extent of the neo-
conservative revolution.
Neo-conservatives brand critics of
the invasion as
unpatriotic and accuse them of treason.
Professor Ryn is correct that
American conservatism has all but disappeared.
For many years I was associated
with National Review, but when I wrote that the
US invasion of Iraq was a strategic blunder, I was
dropped from the masthead.
Ryn shows how neo-conservative
scholars, such as
Harry Jaffa, have worked to redefine the American
Revolution as a
revolutionary break from the past like the
French Revolution, whereas in fact the
American Revolution was a demand by Americans to
enjoy the rights of Englishmen, and the American
Founding Fathers had none of the Messianic ambitions of
Robespierre.
Neo-conservative scholars celebrate
the powerful centralized state created by
President Abraham Lincoln and the War Between the
States: Jaffa is tireless in his admiration and defence
of Lincoln's "energy in the executive".
Ryn locates the origin of
neo-Jacobinism in the political philosopher Leo Strauss,
a professor for many years at the University of Chicago.
Strauss died in 1973, but his
disciples include Jaffa, Bloom, Walter Berns, Martin
Diamond and Harvey Mansfield.
Ryn attributes the dissimulation
and manipulation associated with the neo-conservatives'
case for invading Iraq to Strauss's teachings that
superior intellectuals must use sycophancy and
craftiness in order to protect themselves from ignorant
common people and to guide rulers along the correct
path.
Ryn writes that neo-conservative
professors have "transmitted their ideas to many
thousands of students, many of whom think of themselves
as belonging to a distinct intellectual elite.
A high percentage of them have
gravitated to college and university faculties, think
tanks, journalism and government, and many have reached
very high positions".
Formerly conservative media are now
in neo-conservative hands, and neo-conservatives control
the military and foreign policy of the Bush
administration and write the President's speeches.
The alternative voice to the new
Jacobins is that of postmodernism and cultural Marxism.
This voice, strongest in the universities, is hostile to
America and works against enculturation of its youth in
traditional American values.
As cultural Marxism does not
resonate with the general population, it is not a
political check on the neo-conservatives.
The political Left's agenda is
domestic: a strong welfare state to guarantee equal
outcomes.
The neo-Jacobin agenda is a strong
state that can dominate the world.
What the two intellectual camps
have in common is ambition unchecked by intellectual
humility and moral self-control.
As Ryn observes, this is a recipe
for tyranny.
He argues that America is in peril
because decline in character and intensifying
plebiscitary pressures rob American representative
institutions of restraining and deliberative functions.
The kind of leadership that the
American system was created to provide can no longer
thrive:
With the deterioration of the
institutional supports for critical detachment and
deliberation, responsible decision-making has become
increasingly difficult.... Rare is the politician who
would risk unpopularity or media censure by stating
uncomfortable truths.
Successful politicians tend to be
individuals lacking in deeper knowledge and insight.
They are "pragmatists"
without well-considered convictions of their own who are
willing to go with the flow.
Prominent figures such as America's
Bill Clinton and Britain's Tony Blair are examples of
politicians of technocratic managerial disposition who
are driven far less by an intellectually and
historically grounded vision for their society than by
personal ambition and political convenience.
Weak and visionless politicians
operating in hollowed-out institutions are poor
competitors with an ideological movement confident of
its purpose and moral superiority.
Claes Ryn fears the rise of a
coercive state determined to impose like-mindedness on
its citizens and the world.
However, the same pragmatic
politicians who have no interests except their own re-
election might, in fact, save us from the world the
neo-Jacobins have in mind.
Neo-conservative overconfidence has
turned their Iraq adventure into a political liability.
Concerned only with Bush's re-election, Karl Rove wants
the US out of Iraq before November 2004. If he prevails,
Iraq will not be the first step in the neo-conservative
plan, described by Norman Podhoretz in Commentary
magazine, for US conquest of the Muslim Middle East. The
deracination of Islam in order to achieve Francis
Fukuyama's dictum that "liberalism is the only
ideology with the right to citizenship in today's world"
will fade away as another pipe dream of ahistorical
intellectuals.
As Europe resisted the French
Revolution, Muslims are resisting the American
superpower. Although most Americans are unaware of it,
their best hope is that Iraqi insurgents succeed in
driving the US out of Iraq, thus destroying Bush's
re-election.
Pragmatic politicians will learn
the lesson that neo-Jacobin ambitions are a danger to
political success, a lesson that will rescue us from
"unending war and great disasters".