[Salon] Harris embrace of Cheney goes back to World War I | Responsible Statecraft



On the subject of "Right-wing Revisionism,” this Republican Statecraft article at the bottom is a classic example, and typical of libertarians and Conservative historical revisionism, by omission, or commission. This goes back as so much Republican/libertarian revisionism does, to the post-WW I era when Republicans and proto-fascist/libertarian Nietzscheans, like H.L. Mencken, concocted the propaganda meme that WW I was “Wilson’s War.” Their work has to be seen as a form of totalitarian “Weltanschauung Kulturkampf” for totalitarian control of our very minds, as in "we create our own reality,” for us. That is ultimate in Cognitive/Psychological Warfare, as the Nazi’s largely succeeded at over their own German population. 

Here is another example, from my old friend, libertarian, New York Post writer, Jim Bovard, meaning only that it's an exemplary example, not as criticism of Jim, nor anything else :-)

BLUF:  "But nothing Trump had done compared to the vast deceptions and idealistic swindles that Woodrow Wilson concocted to drag the U.S. into the First World War. Similarly, Trump’s babble about inauguration crowd sizes was chump change compared to Lyndon Johnson’s brazen deceits from 1965 to 1968 to justify rendering half a million American troops to Vietnam.
. . .
"Regardless of who wins in November, Americans will not have an honest president. Is it too much to ask Trump’s opponents to stop peddling a fairy tale version of American history? If people believe that Trump is the only peril on the horizon, it will become far easier for Harris or other politicians to further ravish our rights and liberties. Americans must become far more vigilant about putting presidents and the federal government back on a leash."

Jim's a libertarian which might explain his overlooking of the Right's role in the Vietnam War, as libertarian historiography excludes attributing fault for any of our wars to Republicans/Conservatives, and placed solely on their opponents, the Democrats, in the German authoritarian admiring H.L. Mencken tradition. 

Lyndon Johnson's brazen deceits were indeed horrific, but Jim might consider that the Traditional Conservatives, of Buckley, Burnham, Kendall, and their choice for President, Barry Goldwater, were so feverish for war and pressuring Johnson (and Kennedy) for the Vietnam, they even called for a preemptive nuclear war against all of the USSR, China, and even Albania.

This article is seriously flawed by it's dismissal of Republicans as the war-party (see attached file on Teddy Roosevelt), but otherwise, very correct on Buckley and the Tradtional Conservatives he represented.
"McCarthyism was one of the few pet ideologies Buckley did not renounce. When Regnery republished McCarthy and His Enemies in 1996, Buckley suggested that “a gradual and painful process of historical rectification” would soon vindicate McCarthy’s crusade. At the time of Buckley’s death in 2008, he was still waiting for his idol’s vindication."
. . . 

"Toward the end of the war, he bemoaned the fact that the US had not used nuclear weapons in Vietnam “in a perfectly routine way.” After all, the use of nuclear weapons in Vietnam was easy to defend on the morality scale, he said.

"Buckley so relished the idea of using nuclear weapons he advocated using them against China’s nuclear production facilities in 1965. If you’re keeping score, that’s Japan, China and Vietnam which would have been nuked over a twenty-five year period if Buckley had had his way."

Here's another Traditional Conservative particularly held in high regard today as the precursor to Trumpism, on Vietnam and dissent: 

Attachment: Kendall on Vietnam and and denuncation of Vietniks .pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document


Here's that pompous Traditional Conservative ass, Bill Buckley, whom the New Right (Quincy Institute's Republican Statecraft/The American Conservative) is so shameless, they even "revise" his own explanation before he died that he was only against the Iraq War errors, not the "postulates" he believed in that he justified the war with. Here he applies those life-long fascist postulates to the Vietnam War ("fascist" not  because of his anti-Communist position, but because of his love of war and militarism) in hectoring Sen. Vance Hartke, an under-appreciated Vietnam War opponent: 

Episode 047, Recorded on March 6, 1967

Here is the H.L. Mencken tradition: 

The Great War was in some respects the most important event of Henry Mencken's early career. Of German ancestry and a distant relative of the late Otto von Bismarck, he enthusiastically opposed the war.  And—at least until 1917—openly rooted for the Kaiser's victory and a British defeat.  When America joined the hostilities he assumed the role of spokesman for the reaction against the worst elements of the war; it provided new ammunition for his endless battle against the abuses of the democratic system and the genus of men which Mencken had labeled Boobus Americanus.

Such efforts were not universally popular. The editor of Baltimore's Evening Sun was an Anglophile and a Wilson supporter, and Mencken's column became increasingly obnoxious to him, especially when Mencken led the opposition to Woodrow Wilson's renomination and re-election in 1916. Having tried unsuccessfully to turn Mencken's attention to other matters, his editors sent him to Germany as a war correspondent in 1917, announcing "Mencken is not neutral. He is pro-German."

When Mencken returned to Baltimore in 1917, the United States declared war, and Mencken found himself the target of the super patriots. Mencken was placed under surveillance by the Department of Justice. His mail was opened. Despite this opposition he remained true to himself throughout the war's remainder, although he ceased advocating a German victory. Underlying his attitudes about the war was Mencken's skepticism—he did not believe in equality between anyone and he did not believe in democracy at all. In 1920 he defined democracy as “the theory that the common people know what they want, and deserve to get it good and hard.” In the decade that followed World War I, H.L. Mencken became the single most influential commentator on the American scene.  Here are some of his pronouncements about the war, both during and looking back.

But Mencken's "love of liberty" meant for him idolatry of Hitler's future partner, Ludendorf, who in war or peace, believed in dictatorship: 

Attachment: Ludendorf.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document

And as he later wrote, Hitler was no worse than the Kaiser. 

While I agree with much of what libertarians write in opposition to government overreach, I've come to see their duplicity in that they almost without exception, politically support the most repressive, anti-Constitutional politicians, with their one-sided denunciations of the Democrats. Excluding as they do the even more militaristic, war-fevered Republicans, and heroizing the most authoritarian far-right politicians, like Mencken did. 

A rare exception to that is this Reason article, criticizing the "Alt-Right," now renamed the "New Right": 

But here is the routine libertarian historiography: 
"Someday, hopefully more people will appreciate Mencken’s vital role in nourishing a love for liberty during some of America’s darkest decades."

"Mencken lashed out at President Woodrow Wilson for maneuvering America into World War I. He insisted that the British government shared responsibility for the horrifying conflict, and he attacked the moral pretensions of British officials who pursued a naval blockade punishing innocent people as well as combatants in Germany. Mencken discontinued his column because of wartime hysteria."
(By libertarian Jim Powell, author of "Wilson's War.")



Harris embrace of Cheney goes back to World War I

The kind of progressivism that people expect from the Democratic Party has been subsumed by another

Harris embrace of Cheney goes back to World War I

"What's happened to the Democrats? They used to be antiwar!" Such is one of the many questions being bandied about byan online commentariat seeking to make sense of a litany of Republican endorsements of Kamala Harris, many of them made by party elites known for their hawkish foreign policy like former Wyoming Representative Liz Cheney and former Vice President Dick Cheney.

One could find similar consternation withAmerican liberals’ support for U.S. involvement in the Ukraine crisis. The confusion is based primarily on nostalgia, a selective view of history that obscures the Democratic Party’s longer, more complicated relationship with interventionism.

The reality is quite different: what we are witnessing is the latest iteration of an ongoing intraparty struggle where the dominant liberal interventionist core asserts itself over a smaller progressive noninterventionist periphery. While the latter often dominates popular conceptions of the Democratic Party and its vision for American foreign affairs, the former drives the reality of party politics.

This has been happening since the First World War, best encapsulated bythe public debate betweenColumbia professor John Dewey and one of his students, writer Randolph Bourne. While both were considered liberals of a progressive stripe, they maintained opposing views on American entry into Europe's conflagration.

Known for his adherence to philosophical pragmatism, Dewey asserted that the war could save the world from German militarism and be used to shepherd theAmerican political economy toward a fairer, managed state. Bourne rejected this notion and argued that American entry into the war would undermine the egalitarianism of the larger progressive project and create a labyrinth of bureaucraciesthat would undermine democracy.

While Dewey’s arguments held sway as the United States entered the war, American involvement in Europe’s quarrel, compounded by civil rights abuses at home, proved Bourne posthumously correct.

Despite succumbing to the Spanish Flu in 1918, Bourne’s views of the war, bolstered by the posthumous publication of a collection of essays entitledUntimely Papers, found fertile soil in an American society horrified by the conflict. Chastened by the realities of the Western Front, interwar progressivism took on asolid strain of pacifism and opposition to centralized authority.

While Bourne's sentiments survived the Great War and inspired a postwar mood of non-interventionism, they would not survive America's subsequent entry into World War II, which set the tone for the foreign policy of American liberalism and, by extension, the Democratic Party for the next 30 years.

Liberal interventionism won out in the face of a threat posed by the distinctly right-wing geopolitical threat in the form of the Axis powers. Except for a fewstrident leftwing pacifists and a few dissident liberals who took refuge with the Republican Right, the bulk of theformerly pacifist left took up the cause of intervention in the name of antifascism.

The tone set by the Second World War carried through into American liberalism's conduct of the Cold War. Beneath the din of anti-communism,one often amplified by conservatives, American foreign policy was shaped by a liberal understanding of recent history and the origins of communism. President Harry Truman's eponymously titled doctrine entangled the United States in Europe's security architecture.

After the Eisenhower administration, which solidified the Truman doctrine and expanded it to the Middle East and Southeast Asia, the Cold War framework was thickened further still by a liberal cold warrior, President John F. Kennedy.

Empowered by a materialist and universalistic view of human advancement and the belief that the U.S. had fallen behind the Soviets, JFK pursued a policy known as “flexible response” that expanded American military spending beyond the bounds of nuclear deterrence. These policy changes, maintained under his successor, President Lyndon Johnson, and coupled with a dramatic increase in foreign aid spending, expanded U.S. commitments throughout the postcolonial world.

This combination of asymmetric warfare and economic development drastically raised the stakes of the Cold War and led directly to U.S. entry into the quagmire of the Vietnam War.

Contrary to nostalgia present the Kennedy era as a missed path towards peace, in reality, JFK continued America on a path of war-making and militarization laid out by his predecessors and stretched well beyond the deaths of the slain Kennedy brothers.

While the Vietnam War was the product of Cold War liberalism, it was also its undoing. The horrors of the war, coupled with the inequities of the draft and government secrecy revealed, inspired a mass antiwar movement among the heretofore latent progressive leftthat found a resonant audience on Capitol Hill.

Earlier antiwar works from the left, including that of Randolph Bourne, were revived for a youth movement radicalized against the war. This movement similarly inspired subsequent debates during the late Cold War, particularly on the issue of the Reagan administration’s arming of the Contras in Nicaragua andintervention in the Angolan Civil War. The future seemed bright for a left-wing anti-war sensibility and its access to a Democratic Party that was amenable to its views.

However, the collapse of the Soviet Union, internal changes within the Democratic Party, and the subsequent birth of a new logic for humanitarian interventionism subsumed the ruptures caused by the Vietnam War. While the Democrats indeed offered notable resistance toOperation Desert Storm, often invoking the specter of Vietnam, congressional Democrats provided significant support toU.S. operations in Somalia and interventions inthe former Yugoslavia.

During the Clinton administration, inspired by retrospectives on the Holocaust compounded by the Rwandan genocide, the notion of a “responsibility to protect,” the concept that the U.S. had the moral obligation to use force to prevent mass atrocity, took hold within elite liberal circles.

Due to these competing impulses, Democratic opposition to the Global War on Terror was checkered and paired by a left-wing anti-war movement that, in retrospect,was a shadow of its Vietnam-era self. While, as with Iraq War I, Democrats posted noticeable opposition to Iraq War II, such opposition was overshadowed by the fact that Democratic leadership, especially in the Senate, acquiesced to a war spearheaded by a Republican administration.

Three of the last five Democratic presidential nominees — then Senators John Kerry, Hillary Clinton, and Joe Biden — voted in support of using military action against Iraq. President Obama won in 2008 in part because he publicly opposed war in Iraq before it began and campaigned on ending that war. While he advanced that sentiment by pursuing diplomacy with Iran and opening up to Cuba, he also launched interventions into Libya, Syria, and Yemen, often sold on the grounds of a “responsibility to protect.”

Much like the liberal rationale of interventions past, American involvement was justified on humanitarian grounds and met largely with Democraticacquiescence in Congress andvoter apathy.

Liberalism has entered a new wave of internal strife regarding America’s role in the world. In a new era of great power competition, the progressive base of the Democratic Party has come out hard against unconditional U.S. support forIsrael’s war in Gaza and Lebanon. It has also shown varying degrees of opposition toU.S. involvement in the Ukraine crisis. Yet, unlike the Vietnam era, this grassroots opposition has been unable to substantively influence Democratic politics, where a party elite clings to old views about upholding international norms and alliances, no matter how inconsistent or counterproductive those views in practice may be.

Given this intraparty divide, it should not be surprising that the Harris campaign has courted the endorsement of hawkish Republicans.

This history, however, should not be viewed as determinative of an inevitable path forward. The past has shown that these impulses are not static but held by individuals determined to shape the future.



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