How did we manage to mire ourselves in
the midst of Mesopotamia, enmeshed in a three-sided (at
least) civil war, with vanishing hopes of extrication and the
putative Republican presidential nominee hailing a hundred-year
occupation?
The key to this mystery may be traced back to an earlier act of
"liberation" effected through the vehicle of the Kosovo Liberation
Army. Sunday's official declaration
of independence by Kosovo which will no doubt be immediately
recognized
by the United States and the EU nations, along with the Islamic bloc
underscores the folly of our interventionist foreign policy.
This policy was forged and made possible by an alliance a
popular front, as the lefties used to call it of neoconservatives
and liberal "hawks," and its first
project was gathering support from the Right and the Left for the Kosovo
Liberation Army. Chalabi
and the "liberation"
of Iraq came later, but it was the same
sort of game, with the same
players, using roughly the same moralistic lingo.
Only the locale was changed: the neocon-liberal alliance remained
constant, and grew stronger. By Sept. 11, 2001, this popular front
was ready, willing, and able to propel us headlong into the Middle
East.
I remember quite distinctly when I confronted Rep. Nancy Pelosi
in 1996 I was her Republican
opponent that election year over the question of going to war
against Serbia. Since she refused to debate the issue, or any other,
I had to track her down at one of her orchestrated "public"
meetings. There I asked her: why is this war worth a single life,
either American or Serbian? Her answer consisted of a single word:
"Genocide!" This, indeed, was the rationalization the Clinton
Democrats used, to great effect, in order to make their war
palatable.
The cry was taken up by the neoconservatives, who added their own
special fillip to the war propaganda that filled the airwaves and
the opinion pages of the nation. This would be, said the neocons, a
much-needed demonstration of American power in the post-Cold War
world, an occasion, as Bill Kristol memorably put it, to "crush Serb skulls."
As it turned out, there
was no "genocide" the International Tribunal itself reported
that just
over 2,000 bodies were recovered from postwar Kosovo, including
Serbs, Roma, and Kosovars, all victims of the vicious civil war in
which we intervened on the side of the latter. The whole fantastic
story of another "holocaust" in
the middle of Europe was a fraud. This
is clear when we examine the progression of claims made by the
Clinton administration and its amen corner in the mainstream media.
Initially, we were told that as many as 100,000
Albanian Kosovars had been victims of this "genocide," but that
heady moment soon gave way to more conservative estimates 50,000,
25,000, 10,000
and at that point the War Party stopped talking numbers altogether
and just celebrated the glorious victory of "humanitarian
intervention."
This parallels the propaganda campaign that led up to the
invasion of Iraq, with some slight variations. The principal casus belli
against Saddam Hussein was his supposed possession of weapons of
mass destruction, but this charge was mixed in with the moral case
that we couldn't abandon the Iraqis to someone who had used poison
gas "against
his own people," as Bush and his Democratic
enablers repeated endlessly. This mobilized the liberal "hawks"
while The Weekly Standard's series of essays by Stephen
Hayes, bolstered by the obsessive book-length missives of Laurie
Mylroie, rationalized a diversion away from al-Qaeda and
directed American power against Iraq.
Hillary Clinton often points to Kosovo as an example of
interventionism done
the right way. Yet if we look at the actual results, in
practice, of nation-building, Clinton-style, it has been no more
successful than the Republican version, albeit far less bloody and
on a smaller scale. The ethnic
cleansing that followed the military victory of NATO forces left
the Serbian inhabitants of Kosovo living in a state of siege and
sent them fleeing by the thousands. In the meantime, the rise of a
virulently nationalistic regime in Pristina created an ethnically
pure and fiercely militaristic state, which embodies the "principle"
of gangsterism both in substance
and style. Here again, the parallels with Iraq where a Shi'ite
majority has largely
succeeded in driving the Sunnis out of Baghdad and into the
hinterlands and surrounding countries are all too tragically
obvious.
Another, more ominous parallel is that both the Kosovar and
Shi'ite states birthed by U.S. military action are regional
destabilizers due to the expansionist ideology that energizes their
partisans. The independent "republic" of Kosovo, added on to Albania
and sections of bordering countries, such as Macedonia, is a
component of what Kosovar militants refer to as "Greater
Albania," a vision of mini-empire that they intend to realize by
force. The same is true of the Iraqi
Shi'ite state, which is now said to be a part of what
Washington's grand strategists point to with alarm as the "Shia
Crescent" an evolving "threat" that would never have come into
being in the first place if we had simply stayed out.
Furthermore, the creation of these states has had regional and
even global consequences, none of which are benign. In the case of
the Kosovars, the U.S. appears to have endorsed the concept, if not
the full-scale implementation, of "Greater Albania." It remains to
be seen whether the U.S. will endorse or otherwise encourage
Kosovo's designs on its neighbors. When it comes to the "Shia
Crescent," however, we are told that this is a danger that must
be fought, as the creation of a Shi'ite super-state consisting
of Iraq and Iran is considered inimical to U.S. interests.
From the Balkans to the site of ancient Babylon, our
interventionist policies have set us up for confrontations with
groups and nations that seek to stem U.S. hegemony, principally
Russia and Iran. We are, it seems, presently engaged in a two-front
"civilizational" conflict: with the Slavic world, in central and
eastern Europe, as well as in the rest of Russia's "near abroad";
and with Sunni insurgents and Shi'ite Iranians, i.e., a good deal of
the Islamic world.
How did we get to this point? The grand convergence of Left and
Right interventionists during the Clinton years led directly to what
Gen. William E. Odom has described as the
biggest strategic disaster in American military history. As
Jacob Heilbrunn puts it in They
Knew They Were Right: The Rise of the Neocons:
"As [Lawrence F.] Kaplan and Kristol depicted it in their
[2003] book [The
War Over Iraq], the main issue that should unite the liberal
and conservative hawks was the belief that American power, which had
liberated the Balkans from Serbian aggression, should be redeployed
against Iraq. Once again, morality was the key as well as the
putative link between Osama and Saddam."
"Such bellicose rhetoric," Heilbrunn points out, "was adopted by
numerous liberal hawks, including Paul
Berman." Such militancy wasn't confined to a few left-liberal
intellectuals who suddenly imagined themselves as their generation's
version of George
Orwell. It also infected the mindset of more than one liberal
politician, e.g., Hillary
Clinton, whose pro-war rhetoric at the time of the invasion, as
well as her vote to authorize the strike, reflected the new
bellicosity on the Left. It was Hillary, you'll recall, whose
pressure on her husband to do something about the alleged "genocide"
was the decisive
factor in launching the bombing campaign against Serbia.
The neoconservatives often get the whole of the blame for the
unfolding disaster in Iraq, but the reality is that they couldn't
have pulled it off all by themselves: they needed, sought, and got
the support of
the liberals.
Have liberals learned their lesson? Not if calls for intervention
in Darfur
or Kenya
can be taken seriously. Iran and Pakistan loom large as potential
sites of future U.S. military action, but I doubt whether we can
count on opposition from the liberal wing of the Democratic Party,
either in Congress or as represented among the pundits. The neocon-liberal
popular front lives on and is bound to be an endless source of
schemes for yet more overseas wars in which we have no national
interest.