Plenty of people were wrong about Iraq. Virtually all of the right, and no shortage of people on the left, screwed up, and many have internalized the lessons of Iraq. The chastened liberal hawks are able to endure or move past the cognitive dissonance created by the Iraq failure, and/or simply admit error, and apply the lessons of Iraq to other issues.
Some, however, are determined to maintain a hawkish orientation. I think liberals/progressives/Democrats are far more united on foreign policy than is generally represented by the press (and certainly by political opponents), and I hesitate to hammer people for differences that are probably more rhetorical than real. I also, however, can recognize an engaging argument when I see one, and Ezra Klein has a
great Prospect piece up on liberal hawks and Iran.
As someone who recognizes the idiocy of bombing Iran to achieve our goals either in Iraq or with respect to their nuclear program, I find it disheartening when people loudly invoke the *potential* of military action as some great thing. Look, force is
always an option in a hypothetical. Our military ability, especially our air power dominance, means that the possibility is always there. HOWEVER. "Can" does not equal "should", and it has been true for some time that talking about military action with Iran only serves to legitimize the crazier elements of the Bush administration.
Klein rightly skewers Ken Baer, for example, who insists (regarding Iran) that progressives must "not use anger at one war as an excuse to blink when confronting a future threat head on." This advice, however, does not come attached to any
policy prescriptions for Iran, just a claim that "it would be a disservice to our progressive ideals if we allowed disgust with the Bush Administration to lead to a softness toward totalitarian, anti-egalitarian, atavistic regimes and movements." And this is precisely the problem: the false connection of being opposed to military action, which would be hugely counterproductive, with "softness."
As Klein says, "The remarkable thing about the growing liberal hawk literature on Iran is its evasiveness -- the unwillingness to speak in concrete terms of both the threat and proposed remedies . . . Baer's dodge is not rare. A while back, The New Republic demanded that "the West finally get ruthlessly serious about Iran." Unless "ruthlessly serious" describes some subset of containment theory that I'm unfamiliar with, this seems like mercilessly frivolous advice. But such is the sorry state of discourse on Iran: lots of hyperventilating, but relatively little in the way of actual diagnosis or prescription."
Attacking Iran would be a terrible idea, and anyone who currently supports such an initiative is wholly unserious and devoid of any foreign policy or security understanding. See how easy that was? That should be the party line, not because it's dovish, not because Iraq turned out badly, not because force is inherently bad, but because
it's true. Liberal hawks -- and I might include myself in this general category, having supported military action in Kosovo and Afghanistan, among other times -- would do well to stop worrying about sounding tough and start getting these things right.
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