Christianists Vs West Point

A leading Christianist group, the "Center for Military Readiness," is furious that a West Point cadet got an award for writing a paper arguing against the ban on openly gay men and women serving their country. Christianist activist, Elaine Donnelly, is threatening some kind of investigation:

"I do intend to bring this to the attention of some of the people in the leadership roles at West Point. I think it ought to be questioned."

Several recent polls have found that 60 to 80 percent of Americans believe the military’s ban on honest gay servicemembers should be lifted. 55 Arab linguists and 244 military medical personnel have been fired under the policy.

Jumping the Snark

My slightly snarky headline yesterday to a piece by David Brooks was a snark too far. Yes, I’ve been hyping a McCain-Lieberman combo in 2008 for a few months. But that’s not where david got the idea. He was onto it as long ago as 2003. Brooks’ money quote from the May 9 2003 NewsHour:

There seems to be a buddy system in the democratic race. Have you John Kerry and Howard Dean, both of whom have to win in New Hampshire. They’re going after each other for the liberal side.
For the popular side you have Dick Gephardt and John Edwards going after each other. Gephardt has the lead in that because of his dramatic health care plan. Then what you would call the moderate side, Joe Lieberman and Bob Graham going after each other, running for the nomination of what you might call the centrist, McCain-Lieberman Party, a party that unfortunately doesn’t exist.

My apologies to David. He may well belong to the same political party that Joe Klein and I recently founded over several drinks. Pity it doesn’t exist.

The War and the Democrats

A reader writes:

The first response to your complaint that liberal bloggers don’t offer alternatives is to quote your hero Sir Winston: "The opposition is not responsible for proposing integrated and complicated measures of policy. Sometimes they do, but it is not their obligation."

Beyond that I’d say a perfectly responsible liberal take on the war is this:  The best weapon we have against the Islamic extremists in the long haul is the soft power of modern culture – its comforts, its freedoms and, well, it’s enlightenment.  Modernization is appealing, and will win, if given half chance.  But if by our clumsy, aggressive behavior we cause moderate, ordinary Muslims to confuse modernization with American aggression, with torture, with greed for oil, and with uncritical support for Greater Israel, then by that behavior we deprive ourselves of our greatest strategic advantage.

The right policy after 9/11 was to pursue the actual terrorists to the ends of the earth, but at the same time to have the nerve and maturity to do our best to avoid actions that would alienate the moderates and young people who would otherwise find modernity appealing. Bush of course did exactly the opposite.

To believe all this is not to believe the conflict is unimportant, as you charge, it is to believe that Bush’s frat-boy bravado and general incompetence is everyday worsening our long-term prospects. And that winning control of at least one house of Congress in November is the necessary first step on the long road back to an adult foreign policy.

My only substantive quarrel with this is as follows: the proclaimed Bush policy was not mere deployment of brute force, torture, bombs and swagger as a response to the civil war within Islam. It was ostensibly to create a beach-head for modernity and democracy in Iraq. That, at least, was the rationale I signed onto. Now, maybe in retrospect, the idea of a beach-head for democracy was always just a cover for Rumsfeld and Cheney to try to terrify a bunch of "barbarians" with brute force. And in so far as the war was designed this way, the Bush administration’s general incompetence and brutality has, of course, done the precise opposite. It’s actually emboldened the enemy, made the West look weak, and lost us potential support in the vital center of Muslim opinion. Send too few troops into Iraq and of course the Islamists think we’re unserious. That’s why I couldn’t support Bush again last time around; and why I hope the Democrats take back at least one chamber this fall – if only to put a break on the Queegs and Strangeloves in the Pentagon and the Veep’s office.

But, for all Cheney’s and Rumsfeld’s flaws, they are at least proposing something serious, however ineptly carried out. I have yet to hear anti-war voices on the left propose a positive strategy for defeating Islamist terror at its roots, or call for democratization of the Arab Muslim world. Indeed, I heard little but scorn or silence when Bush announced this vision in London. Do the Democrats stand for democracy in Iraq? Or in Iran? Do they favor Beinart-style containment of Islamism? Nuclear deterrence against Tehran? Certainly, the Kossites seem utterly uninterested in any of these subjects. That’s their prerogative; and it’s equally my prerogative not to take them seriously until they do.

The same goes for the Dems as a whole. Until the opposition party presents a progressive, democratic agenda to reform the Middle East – as Blair has done in Britain, for example – there’s no reason to take them seriously on national security. Maybe their presidential candidate will articulate such a vision. So far, however: so not so much.

Yglesias Award Nominee

"And yet, much as I’m reluctant to agree with him, Weisberg has a point: aside from kvetching about Bush’s policies, the liberal blogosphere has chosen to almost unanimously sit out any substantive discussion of the fight against radical jihadism and what to do about it. Emphasis counts, and this widespread silence makes it hard to avoid the conclusion that liberal bloggers just don’t find the subject very engaging," – Kevin Drum today.

He’s absolutely right. I’ve been a ferocious critic of Bush, but primarily because I believe this war is extremely important, and that he has been grotesquely inept and immoral in his conduct of it. The threat, as we were reminded this morning, is as grave as ever. Bush’s incompetence has compounded it. When DailyKossers simply decide to ignore, say, the Israel-Hezbollah conflict in favor of domestic Democratic in-fighting, they are telling us something. They’re telling us they still have no clue about the struggle we are in. (That goes for Mickey Kaus, as well, by the way: unable to muster anything but the odd, dyspeptic splutter about the great struggle of our time.) The Kossites are telling us that if they control the Democratic party, the Dems will not take the threat seriously enough. That’s the Kos message on the war: we don’t just refuse to fight Bush’s war, but any war. Not all of them think that way, but a serious minority do. Maybe those who understand the threat on the left can now take on their comrades who put the "war on terror" in quote-marks. The corpses of 9/11 did not have quote-marks around them.

The War for Our Values

Here’s testimony from a Lebanese Christian that is worth remembering today:

I was raised in Lebanon, where I was taught that the Jews were evil, Israel was the devil, and the only time we will have peace in the Middle East is when we kill all the Jews and drive them into the sea.

When the Moslems and Palestinians declared Jihad on the Christians in 1975, they started massacring the Christians, city after city. I ended up living in a bomb shelter underground from age 10 to 17, without electricity, eating grass to live, and crawling under sniper bullets to a spring to get water.

It was Israel who came to help the Christians in Lebanon. My mother was wounded by a Moslem’s shell, and was taken into an Israeli hospital for treatment. When we entered the emergency room, I was shocked at what I saw. There were hundreds of people wounded, Moslems, Palestinians, Christians, Lebanese, and Israeli soldiers lying on the floor. The doctors treated everyone according to their injury. They treated my mother before they treated the Israeli soldier lying next to her. They didn’t see religion, they didn’t see political affiliation, they saw people in need and they helped.

For the first time in my life I experienced a human quality that I know my culture would not have shown to their enemy. I experienced the values of the Israelis, who were able to love their enemy in their most trying moments. I spent 22 days at that hospital. Those days changed my life and the way I believe information, the way I listen to the radio or to television. I realized I was sold a fabricated lie by my government, about the Jews and Israel, that was so far from reality. I knew for fact that, if I was a Jew standing in an Arab hospital, I would be lynched and thrown over to the grounds, as shouts of joy of Allah Akbar, God is great, would echo through the hospital and the surrounding streets.

Our strongest weapons in this war are our values. Yes, military force is important and necessary. But our values are what will win in the long run ‚Äî because they reflect a deeper truth about human dignity than the poisonous doctrines of distorted religious certitude and bigotry. That’s why we must never ‚Äî never ‚Äî tolerate torture of prisoners; that’s why we should never sacrifice the rule of law; that’s why we should never give civilian politicians a "get-out-of-jail-free" card for war crimes. And that’s why we should support Israel now, more than ever. She is not perfect. But her enemies are in a different category of morality. The difference between collateral civilian casualties and civilian casualties as the entire purpose of war is the difference between an embattled civilization and barbarism. Yes, there are grays in the Middle East. But this isn’t one of them.