An Unjust War?

Norm Geras, who, like me, despised the Saddam regime and feels no need to apologize for wanting it removed, is nonetheless forced to a brutal provisional conclusion: this war has failed. That does not mean that we should pull out (allthough some may reasonably infer that). It does mean that the reasons many of us backed this war have been utterly undermined in the last three years:

Had I been able to foresee, in January and February 2003, that the war would have the results it has actually had in the numbers of Iraqis killed and the numbers now daily dying, with the country (more than three years down the line) on the very threshold of civil war if not already across that threshold, I would not have felt able to support the war and I would not have supported it.

Measured, in other words, against the hopes of what it might lead to and the likelihoods as I assessed them, the war has failed. Had I foreseen a failure of this magnitude, I would have withheld my support. Even then, I would not have been able to bring myself to oppose the war. As I have said two or three times before, nothing on earth could have induced me to march or otherwise campaign for a course of action that would have saved the Baathist regime. But I would have stood aside.

That’s where I am too. Before the war, I argued for it along just war grounds: that the risk of inaction was greater than action, that the continuance of sanctions was an immoral burden on the Iraqi people, that we would conduct the war aiming to minimize casualties, and would assume responsibility for the security situation as soon as we toppled Saddam. But we now know, with the benefit of hindsight, that the risks of inaction were far less than we were told; we know, after Abu Ghraib, Gitmo, Bagram and all the other torture sites, that in the conduct of the war, the Bush administration has wrecked America’s moral high ground; we know that our refusal to provide security for Iraqis has led to the deaths of more innocents than even under Saddam. We may not be the ones killing civilians. But we are responsible for the situation in which such killings can occur with impunity. Those of us who supported this war cannot wash our hands of the blood of tens of thousands of innocents it has now claimed. Our intentions may have been good. But we misjudged this administration. And we misjudged the extent of the collapse of Iraqi civil society in the 1990s.

That changes the moral equation. I stand by my good-faith belief that ridding the world of Saddam’s tyranny was a great and important thing. I even stand by my naive but sincere faith in the Bush administration in 2002. But I was wrong, as events have proven. And the human carnage in Iraq today, taking place because the U.S. refused to provide order after the invasion, renders the justice of the war deeply compromised. A war that was not, it turns out, the last resort; a war that has authorized torture; a war that has led to a civilian casualty rate of around 7,000 a month; a war that has unleashed far more terrorism than it has stifled: whatever else this is, it is not the just war some of us once supported. It is in another category now.

That does not mean our moral responsibility is to abandon Iraq even further. It may require the opposite. But it does mean that we have witnessed a moral failure on an epic scale. I cannot see how voters with consciences can reward those who let it happen.

Insta-Defeat?

Glenn Reynolds provides his analysis of why the GOP may lose many seats next month. All his points are fair ones, but they miss what are for me the big issues. Two words: Iraq and spending. Three years after the invasion of Iraq, we have a problem. Instead of a stabilizing society with new freedoms, we have record levels of suicide attacks, tens of thousands of civilian casualties (with records being broken each month), rampant torture and death squads, and political paralysis (I’m hearing rumors of a coup brewing in Baghdad). We also failed to find any of the WMDs the war was based on. All this means – and I’m sorry to break this to Instapundit – that someone in the Bush administration screwed up the most important task of our time. Why will the Republicans be defeated this November, if they are? To paraphrase Mr Carville, it’s losing the war, stupid.

People also vote Republican because they want representatives able to say no to government spending. The current Bush GOP says: YES, MORE PLEASE. The two most significant facts about the current crew in power is that they have increased the debt overhang facing the next generation from $20 trillion to $43 trillion in five years. The new Medicare entitlement was putting fiscal gasoline on a raging fire of debt. No one who voted for it can even be faintly described as conservative. Then there’s simple pork and corruption. The last transportation bill had over 6,000 earmarks in it. Reagan vetoed a bill because it had 150 earmarks in it. That was when the GOP was conservative. What Bush-DeLay-Hastert-Frist are about is not fiscal conservatism in any recognizable form. They are about borrowing vast amounts of money from Asian banks, spending more liberally than any Democratic Congress since FDR, and using it to bribe voters in gerry-mandered districts to keep themselves in power.

They have become what they once opposed. Which is why it is time to kick them out.

The Evil of Kim Jong-Il

Kimjongilkcnaepa

It’s easy to ridicule him, laugh at him, and mock him. But the North Korean dictator remains one of the most heinous mass murderers in history and the state he runs one of the vilest on the planet. It’s no surprise he is also a eugenicist:

The North Korean regime’s obsession with racial purity has led to the killing of disabled infants and forced abortions for women suspected of conceiving their babies by Chinese fathers, according to a growing body of testimony from defectors.

The latest description of Kim Jong-il’s policy of state eugenics came from a North Korean doctor, Ri Kwang-chol, who escaped last year and told a forum in Seoul that babies with deformities were killed soon after birth.

"There are no people with physical defects in North Korea," Ri said. Such babies were put to death by medical staff and buried quickly, he claimed. He denied ever committing the act himself.

Murdering the weak and starving the poor: the tools of dictators everywhere.

(Photo: KCNA/EPA.)

The Selling of the Conservative Soul

Tcscover Here’s part of how it was mortgaged for power:

Alongside a 38 percent increase in government spending in five years came the inevitable corruption. When vast increases in spending are at stake, they act like a homing signal for every sleazeball and lobbyist in the country. The number of registered lobbyists in Washington doubled under five years of Bush Republicanism, according to reporter Jeffrey Birnbaum. His explanation? "In the 1990s, lobbying was largely reactive. Corporations had to fend off proposals that would have restricted them or cost them money. But with pro-business officials running the executive and legislative branches, companies are also hiring well-placed lobbyists to go on the offensive and find ways to profit from the many tax breaks, loosened regulations and other government goodies that increasingly are available."

It has been a free-for-all at the trough of your tax-payer dollars. And we’re supposed to believe that this is conservatism? The quote is taken from the fourth chapter of "The Conservative Soul." If you want a thorough take on how the GOP has hijacked conservatism in the pursuit of its own power and wealth, read it.

Email of the Day

A reader writes:

I grew up in a small town, raised conservative Christian by conservative and amazing parents, turned out gay and caught between two worlds. I always knew my politics were more left of my parents, but not nearly as left as some of my friends. I was branded "conservative" and "Republican" – like they were dirty words – and never really knew what I was.

I’m happy now, though, to embrace my conservatism for what it is: a unwavering belief in peoples’ rights to make decisions for the betterment of their own lives, and those they love, while not infringing upon the rights of others.  Although i don’t always agree with you, I always find your opinions insightful.  And i thank you for helping me to come to an understanding of what I myself believe, and what being a "conservative" actually is.

There are more of that kind of conservative out there than the GOP establishment would have you believe. I hope my book contributes to a deeper understanding of the conservatism that believes in freedom and tolerance, rather than big government and bigotry.