The War Party has a reliable strategy
when faced with a rising political figure who threatens their
monopoly on American politics, one that is time-tested and
invariably successful: when all else fails, they bring out the Smear
Bund.
This is a term coined by John
T. Flynn, I believe, in the run-up to the outbreak of the Second
World War: it gives a name to his thesis that a number of pro-war
groups had coordinated a campaign to smear and destroy the
anti-interventionist America First Committee. Flynn started out his
pamphlet, The Smear Terror, with this admonition: "Would you
believe that there are in this country several outfits that
specialize in the destruction of reputations?"
Today, of course, such a declaration seems naοve: we all know
about "swift-boating,"
and, much to the dismay of Flynn's ghost, no doubt, the pattern runs
true to form down through the years. Anyone who argues for a
fundamental change in American foreign policy, away from
interventionism and toward a more rational view of world affairs, is
targeted and destroyed.
This isn't about partisan politics and loyalties: the Smear Bund
attacks Republicans as well as Democrats , as Ron Paul found out
when The New Republic that old war-horse of interventionism
dug up some yellowed newsletters published under his name, which
contained articles that didn't pass the political correctness
test. Now, in fact, these infamous newsletters didn't print anything
more toxic than your typical conservative Republican, circa 1980,
might have written or believed: but no matter. The purveyors of
this tripe didn't (and don't)
care how many times, or how definitively the charge of "racism"
is debunked
that the charge was raised at all, and that the howling accompanying
this "discovery" reached a certain noise level, was all that mattered.
Forever after, therefore, all Paul's opponents had to say was:
"Isn't this the same Ron Paul who sanctioned racism'?" And the
argument, as far as the punditocracy is concerned, is over.
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Now they're doing the same thing to Barack Obama. While his foreign
policy prescriptions are a much
less radical departure from the interventionist norm than
Paul's, Obama's
chances of occupying the White House have the War Party seriously
alarmed, and the word is going out: Get him!
The Reverend Jeremiah Wright is really a piece of work,
and one is at a loss of what else to say about him, except that
anyone who believes that the US government is responsible for the
AIDS epidemic is certifiable, period. It matters not that some of
his statements about US foreign policy being the moral equivalent of
terrorism are undeniably
true: because, in short, he doesn't matter. After all, he
isn't running for the highest office in the land: Obama is. And if
anyone on God's green earth is the complete antipode of Obama in
his temperament and demeanor, as well as his politics then surely
it is Wright.
This fact underscores the essence of the Smear Bund's
methodology: the politics of distraction. Look over here, not over
there! Forget about the war that is killing our
soldiers, and threatening to start multiple conflicts with Iran, Syria,
and various Lebanese factions
just remember that Rev. Wright once said "Goddamn America."
The really artful aspect of all this is the method of
substitution occurring right before our eyes: they can't run against
Obama, so they're running against Wright. Sure, they aren't the same
person, but, you know, all those black people look and think
alike. That, at any rate, is the crude racist assumption at the
heart of the Smear Bund's strategy. The anti-Obama cabal is hoping
the American people will look at these two wildly disparate
individuals and perceive them as melting into each other.
Now Obama's got the old black leadership trying to tear him down,
with Al
"the Liar"
Sharpton
and Earl
Ofari Hutchinson biting at his ankles: they're mortified that
Obama's post-racial politics will render them irrelevant, and
they're right about that.
Hutchinson manages to pull off one of the Smear Bund's favorite
tactics: role reversal. It consists of projecting on to the victim
the very characteristics that define the victimizers. So we get
Hutchinson denouncing "Obama's Wright obsession." Obama, you see,
has been spending too much time defending himself from these
charges: he is the one who is obsessed with Wright, not the
Smear Bund and the "mainstream" media (or do I repeat myself?).
What a laugh: every night we hear the same mantra coming out the
Fox-MSNBC-network
news combine: Wright, Wright, Wright, like the droning of a cicada.
And that, you see, is Obama's fault.
Divert, distract, demonize that's the strategic vision of the
War Party. As long as we're talking about the Rev. Wright, we don't
get to talk about the war, including the one to come
with Iran. Let there be no doubt: it's Obama's foreign policy
"deviationism" that has the Establishment running scared, and it's
the neocons who are in the vanguard of the smear campaign. As
Ha'aretz pointed
out the other day:
"The Republican Party's neoconservative clique is trawling
archives for anti-Israeli' essays by advisers who had been seen in
Obama's staff. Robert Malley, who was President Bill Clinton's
special assistant during the Camp David talks, joined Obama. The
neoconservatives reached Malley's father, a Jew of Egyptian descent,
who, alas, kept childhood ties with Yasser Arafat. Malley junior is
accused of publishing a joint article with an Oslo-supporting
Palestinian, in which they dared to argue that Ehud Barak played a
major role in the Camp David summit's failure in July 2000."
They want desperately to engage Obama on this issue, because
their whole strategy is meant to culminate in raising the specter of
black anti-Semitism. That's what all this Wright-Farrakhan-"black
extremist" brouhaha is about: they don't dare say that Obama is an
anti-Semite, at this point. What they do say, however, is that he
hangs out with anti-Semites. As Atlantic blogger Matt
Yglesias put it:
"First Obama was an anti-Semite because Zbigniew Brzezinski is
an anti-Semite. Then Obama was an anti-semite because Robert Malley
is an anti-semite. And now according to [Commentary's Noah] Pollak
it's Samantha Power who's tainted by Jew-hatred."
With these folks, it always comes back to charges of "racism" and
"extremism." Ron Paul = David Duke, and Obama = Farrakhan. And it
always, always, always comes back to Israel. What has
Israel's amen corner in the US up in arms about the prospect of
President Obama is that he was capable of saying this:
"There is a strain within the pro-Israel community that says
unless you adopt an unwavering pro-Likud approach to Israel, you're
anti-Israel and that can't be the measure of our friendship with
Israel. One of the things that struck me when I went to Israel was
how much more open the debate was around these issues in Israel than
they are sometimes here in the United States."
That he said it in front of a predominantly Jewish audience in
Cleveland just makes his transgression all the more aggravating to
the
Lobby. No wonder they're scared witless.
This idea that the US must shield Israel from the consequences of
its intransigence, its policy of apartheid
in the occupied territories, its unacknowledged
nuclear arsenal that hangs like a sword of Damocles over the Middle
East, really exemplifies how American interests are ill-served by
the "special relationship." Israel's unmitigated
aggression and heedlessness act against
our interests, in the Middle East and around the world, and yet
still we give them our unconditional support. Israeli military
supremacy in the region and diplomatic hubris is the purest product
of American hegemony, which is why US policy toward Israel is really
the touchstone as far as the War Party is concerned. That is why
Obama has been relentlessly grilled, and his advisors have been
examined under a microscope, in regard to this issue.
Hillary Clinton, as far as the War Party is concerned, is the
"safe" candidate: she came through for them with her recent remark
that Iran ought to be "obliterated,"
while we must
cover Israel and unnamed other countries in the region with
our nuclear shield. She doesn't care what she has to do in order to
win, and if that means making Obama unelectable well then, so be
it. Rush
Limbaugh, Bill Kristol,
Richard
Mellon Scaife, Sean
Hannity these are her new allies. Who's next Norman
Podhoretz? What more confirmation do we need of my contention
that both political parties in America are merely the "left" and
"right" wings of the War Party?
If all else fails the smears, the "mainstream" media barrage,
the dirty tricks the anti-Obama crowd can always bring out the
really big guns. Those "super-delegates"
were put in place in order to make sure that the Democratic
presidential candidate toes the War Party's line, and guarantees
that the nominating process never strays very far from their iron
grip. As I said of
Obama in February: "They'll never let him become president."
Unfortunately, it looks like I was right.
NOTES IN THE MARGIN
Speaking of the Smear Bund: Those
tireless smear-mongers over at the grievously misnamed "Reason"
magazine haven't let up on Ron Paul. On the occasion of Paul's just-published
book rising to the #1
position on Amazon (and debuting at #7
on the New York Times bestseller list), they vomit the
same old garbage up and my response is here.
Speaking of books, and Ron Paul: My first book, Reclaiming
the American Right: The Lost Legacy of the Conservative
Movement, is being reprinted by the Intercollegiate Studies
Institute, with a new introduction by Georgetown political scientist
George W. Carey. Ron Paul said of this book:
"When I was deciding whether or not to run for President as a
Republican, I re-read Justin Raimondo's Reclaiming the
American Right and it gave me hope that the
anti-interventionist, pro-liberty Old Right, which had once
dominated the party, could and would rise again. Here is living
history: the story of an intellectual and political tradition that
my campaign invoked and reawakened. This prescient book, written in
1993, could not be more relevant today."
The publication date is May 15, but you can pre-order here.
~
Justin Raimondo