Sultan Knish
The one thing that Hagel, Kerry and Brennan all have in common, besides
being Washington insiders, is that they all agree that terrorism is
basically a misunderstanding. All three fancy themselves men of the
world who know more than the peasants back home because they have spent a
few days being shepherded through high level meetings in Brussels,
Riyadh and Beijing.
They have spent decades marinating in talking points and they know, for
example, that terrorism is due to poverty and that Islamic terrorists
aren't really Muslim, they just try to convince us that they are to
trick us into going to war with Islam. Most of all they know that we
can't beat the terrorists on the battlefield, all we can hope to do is
wage a war for their hearts and minds, empowering moderates by resolving
grievances until the extremists are discredited and peace reigns on
earth.
Every word of it is nonsense, but national policy runs on nonsense. In
the last four years the government has run massive deficits to save the
economy, compelled everyone to buy health insurance to fix health care
and flirted with minting a trillion dollar coin to cover its debts. A
policy's obvious ridiculousness only ranks it higher in the estimation
of idiots insiders who confuse stupidity with out-of-the-box thinking.
Whether it's domestic crime or the international rise of a terrorist
movement, the left clings to its sociological security blanket
explaining everything in terms of poverty and disenfranchisement. It
doesn't matter to the idiot left whether they are dealing with gangs in
Oakland, Marxist terrorists in Nicaragua, drug dealers in Chicago,
Communist guerrillas in Vietnam, race riots in New York or Muslim
terrorists in Afghanistan; to them it's all reducible to the same tired
formula of Imperialism + Capitalism = Poverty and Resistance to be
solved with day care centers and grievance commissions.
Leftists love moving to Chicago slums, Afghan caves or Latin American
peasant villages, living with the natives, struggling with their toilets
and finding deep spiritual meaning in their simple lives. And despite
learning to speak their language, badly, and taking enough photos of
them to populate a museum, they invariably leave without a clue about
who the locals are and what makes them tick. But that's because they
assume that they already know what makes them tick. Oppression. And with
that covered, they never bother to learn anything of more significance
than a greeting and a goodbye.
The one indispensable word that the left uses to explain all the
violence is "Misunderstood." Criminals and terrorists aren't bad...
they're misunderstood. We think that they're threatening and they think
that we're threatening. We think that they're attacking us, but they're
really just defending themselves. We think that they want to destroy us,
but they just really want us to live up to our ideals.
According to John Kerry, the Viet Cong and the Sandinistas were both
misunderstood. We thought that they were Communist terrorists, when
really it was we who forced them to become terrorists and Communists.
Since then Kerry has continued discovering other misunderstood people,
including Saddam Hussein and Bashar Assad, and will go on discovering
them on a freelance basis.
Liberal misunderstanders take a look at almost any atrocity, and sigh
wearily and ask, with the patience of saints, "Don't you understand that
we made them do it?"
The Taliban didn't want to go to war with us, but we made them do it
because we refused to work with them to extradite Bin Laden. Bin Laden
didn't want to go to war with us, but we made him do it by defending
Saudi Arabia from Saddam. Saddam Hussein didn't want to invade Kuwait,
we made him do it and then we made him pretend that he had WMDs because
we made him afraid of us.
By the time the ball of twine is fully unwound, we discover that no one
in history ever wanted to fight us, but we made them do it by refusing
to do the right thing or by doing the wrong thing and thereby throwing
the whole picture out of whack leaving them with no choice but to do
what they did. And all of it was just blowback from looting the world of
its oil and diamonds and turning it into markets for our products. And
when we weren't stealing diamonds and oil, then we were starting wars
just so the military-industrial complex could bill the government for
some more $145 screwdrivers.
The people who think this way aren't just some smelly hippies sunning
themselves at a protest rally; they're the next Secretary of State,
Secretary of Defense and CIA Director of the United States.
John Brennan knows that you can't beat terrorists on the battlefield. So
does John Kerry. And so does Chuck Hagel. And two Johns and a Chuck
can't be wrong. Neither could Vyacheslav, as in Vyacheslav Molotov,
Stalin's Foreign Minister, who said, during the tenure of the
Hitler-Stalin pact, that, "Everyone can see that an ideology cannot be
destroyed by force...Thus it is not only senseless, it is criminal to
wage such a war as a war for 'the destruction of Hitlerism,' under the
false flag of a struggle for democracy."
Hitlerism was destroyed by force and war. Islamism could be destroyed by
force and war, or at the very least by not sending it billions of
dollars, but our leaders are much too wise for such a policy. Instead
they sign their own Hitler-Stalin pacts and then act surprised when
'Hitler' overruns their mission in Benghazi and kills everyone he can
get his hands on.
Liberals face the same divide on foreign policy that they did on
crime which splits them between the appeasers and the radicals. The
radicals wanted to dismantle the police forces while the appeasers only
wanted to neuter them and have them police the streets as gently as
possible. Terrorism brings out the same policy instincts in them. The
radicals ally with the terrorists, going off to visit them in Gaza and
Pakistan, while the appeasers figure out how to fight them as little as
possible.
Sending remote drones to
kill terrorist leaders is the least we can do short of doing nothing at
all, which is why the radicals object to it. The difference between the
radicals and the appeasers is that the radicals believe that we are 100
percent wrong... while the appeasers assume that we are only 60 to 70
percent wrong. That gives them a 30 or 40 percent worth of moral elbow
room which they can use to arrest drug dealers and snipe at Al Qaeda
leaders.
But what both radicals and appeasers have in common is that they don't
believe that fighting the war will actually accomplish anything. The
appeasers fight it as a formality, for political reasons or as part of
some grand chess game for isolating the "extremists". They're no more
committed to it than Obama was to his Afghanistan surge. It's always a
ploy, a positioning maneuver that will discredit the enemy and force
them to come to terms. War to them is just peace negotiations by other
means. And when they realize that the peace negotiations aren't
happening, they give up on the war.
War to liberals is a strategy for gracefully conceding a losing
argument. They don't believe in the war itself, which they feel only
happened as a result of a series of mistakes and violations by us. What
they would like to do is wind it down at a peace conference where
everyone admits they were wrong and shakes hands eager to move on with
the business of opening gay bars in Kandahar. And if they can't think
of a way to win the peace, then they have no interest in winning the
war.
The essence of the "Hearts and Minds" dogma is a denial that wars can be
won in any sphere other than the social context. Wars on poverty can be
won, but not wars on people. Once you begin fighting the Nazis, the
Viet Cong or Al Qaeda... then you have already lost. Even if you win,
the people are bound to rise up and then you'll be stuck playing
occupying imperialist. And that becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy when
armies are neutered to lose battles while wining hearts and minds,
getting stuck in the middle and losing both kinds of wars.
Our three new leading foreign policy figures who will be expected to
advance American interests around the world are different, but they are
basically the same. They have that blank distant look of dimwitted men
who fancy themselves intelligent, They think that the talking points
that they have borrowed from the Saudis explain everything and the war
is a chess game that we can win if we just outmaneuver the misunderstood
terrorist Islamist by aiding the misunderstood political Islamists
proving once and for all that you don't need to fight to take over a
country, you can just run for office.
Stalin could not comprehend that German tanks were headed his way, no
matter how many Soviet agents passed along the word. Liberals, whether
they come from Massachusetts or Nebraska, are similarly unable to
understand that the planes really are headed for them. They have gotten
too bogged down in thinking of this as a war of ideas, of ideologies,
where they are always more right than we are, to see that this war isn't
about us, it's about them.
This isn't a war of ideas, at least not the kind that we can play a part
in. Islamic theological debates are as abstract and irrelevant to us as
Communist debates over the finer points of Historical Materialism. It
can be helpful to understand them if you're making a detailed study of
the enemy, but most wars really come down to a group expanding its power
and territory through conquest. It can't be won by making Al Qaeda look
bad with some Saudi inspired "Hearts and Minds" campaign. It can only
be won on the battlefield.
Kerry, Hagel and Brennan are men of nuance. They know better than to try
and win wars by winning them. Instead they believe that we can only win
by losing, triumphing through appeasement and securing a permanent
peace by letting ourselves get kicked around while fighting with one
hand tied behind our backs. They are not interested in what we can do to
win, but in the least we can do to wait out the war until the
inevitable force of progressivism finally reaches deep into Kandahar,
Riyadh and Tehran bringing with it gay bars, mandatory abortion coverage
and the brotherhood of all mankind.
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