September 24, 2002
“Fight World War IV” - Or Let Israelis Immigrate?
By Paul Craig Roberts
Neoconservatives are preparing the groundwork for
far-reaching and interminable U.S. involvement in the
Middle East. Neoconservative leader Norman Podhoretz
makes the case in the current issue of Commentary,
the influential magazine of the American Jewish
Committee, that it is not enough for the U.S. to attack
only Afghanistan and Iraq.
Podhoretz argues that
“changes of regime are
the sine qua non throughout the region.”
[“In Praise of the Bush Doctrine,” by
Norman Podhoretz, Commentary, September
2002]
The challenge that President Bush faces, says
Podhoretz, is
“to fight World War
IV--the war against
militant Islam.”
He identifies the enemies:
“The regimes that richly
deserve to be overthrown and replaced are not confined
to the three singled-out members of the axis of evil
[Iraq, Iran, North Korea]. At a minimum, the axis
should extend to Syria and Lebanon and Libya, as well as
‘friends’ of America like the
Saudi royal family and
Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak, along with the
Palestinian Authority.”
Unlike the Bush administration, Podhoretz realizes
that to overthrow the Taliban and Saddam Hussein is
merely to stir a hornets’ nest, while leaving in place
multitudes of anti-Israeli and anti-American militants.
President Bush must own up to the true task, says
Podhoretz, and find
“the stomach to
impose [original emphasis] a new political
culture on the defeated”
Middle East, just as we did unapologetically to
Germany and Japan.
There is logic to Podhoretz’s argument. But do
President Bush and the American people understand that
the imposition of secular democracy on Afghanistan and
Iraq are merely beginning steps in the forceful
political reconstruction of the entire Middle East by
U.S. might?
Americans are indebted to Podhoretz for making it
clear that a U.S. invasion of Iraq is the beginning of
World War IV. President Bush and his strategic thinkers
should ponder this carefully and be upfront with the
American people.
Getting rid of Saddam Hussein will not solve the
Israeli-American conflict with militant Islam. On the
contrary, it will widen the conflict.
How many sons, husbands, fathers, brothers,
grandsons, uncles, cousins and friends are Americans
willing to give to a war, the object of which is the
social and political reconstruction of the Middle East?
Are the American people prepared to bear the tax and
economic burden of such a prodigious undertaking?
Indeed, with significant portions of its
manufacturing and high tech capability now located
offshore, can the U.S. economy bear the burden?
Would such a struggle leave us exhausted, unable to
confront the rising power of an ambitious China?
A more critical question is whether open borders have
turned “the American people” into an abstraction. The
Washington Post has always favored massive
immigration because it
builds Democratic
voting rolls. But on September 15 the newspaper
called the U.S. a “Tower of Babel” whose sense of
community has been shattered by the rise of ethnic
media. [“The Meaning of News in So Many Voices”
By Margaret Engel, Washington Post, September 15,
2002]
The Post reports that the penetration of what
we are accustomed to call the
major media is down to 43 percent of the U.S.
population and dropping. Increasingly,
“people in key metropolitan
areas now get their news from ethnic newspaper and
broadcast outlets.”
California has 500 ethnic newspapers, magazines, TV
and radio stations and online publications. The Post
reports that there are
“15 Thai-language
newspapers in Los Angeles, several 24-hour radio
stations for
Pashto and Dari Speakers.”
Orange County has 30
Vietnamese publications, and California has 7 major
ethnic dailies and flourishing Spanish-language TV
networks.
The Post asks:
“If you can’t understand
what your fellow subway rider is reading, if you can’t
follow the opinions he or she listens to each night, how
can you hope to hold a discussion about national
politics? Aren’t our opinions and national discourse
likely to become ever more
Balkanized?”
President Bush should ponder this question before he
undertakes to reconstruct the Middle East. He must face
the fact that his own country has been reconstructed by
massive immigration from the third world.
Are these legions of hyphenated-Americans
in sympathy with the neoconservative goals that
control U.S. foreign policy?
Before the U.S. finds itself
embroiled in a Middle East conflict for which it
lacks both economic means and popular support, I propose
a different solution: Terminate the Middle Eastern
conflict by inviting the 5 million Jews in Israel to
settle in the U.S.
The entire population of Israel amounts to no more
than two years of
illegal Mexican immigration. The Jews can function
here, if they wish, as an autonomous ethnic enclave just
like all the
other enclaves created by our shortsighted
immigration policy.
Despite extreme measures, Israel is unable to defend
itself from Palestinian terrorists. The U.S. will not be
able to defend Israel or itself from
one billion Muslims.
Trying to create a small
Jewish state in a
sea of Muslims was a 20th century mistake. Trying to
reconstruct the Middle East would be a bigger mistake.
Why not recognize the mistake, evacuate the Jews,
leave the Muslims to themselves, and focus on saving our
own country?
Paul Craig Roberts is the
co-author with Lawrence M. Stratton of
The Tyranny of Good Intentions: How Prosecutors and
Bureaucrats Are Trampling the Constitution in the Name
of Justice.
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