While enjoying my breakfast coffee this morning, my day was further brightened upon reading an entry by Lew Rockwell at his blog referencing the following New York Times book review by Michiko Kakutani of David Frum and Richard Perle’s new warmongering little classic. Bravo, Ms. Kakutani, for telling it like it is, even at the risk of being thought “unpatriotic.”
The title of this new book by David Frum and Richard Perle, An End to Evil: How to Win the War on Terror, says it all. It captures the authors’ absolutist, Manichaean language and worldview; their cocky know-it-all tone; their swaggering insinuation that they know “how to win the war on terror” and that readers, the Bush administration and the rest of the world had better listen to them…
Making its points with all the subtlety of a pit bull on steroids, An End to Evil is smug, shrill and deliberately provocative. Which might not be so surprising given the authors’ track records. Mr. Frum, a former White House speechwriter who helped coin the “axis of evil” phrase that President George W. Bush used in his 2002 State of the Union address, adopted a similarly bellicose manner in his 2003 book The Right Man: The Surprise Presidency of George W. Bush. Mr. Perle, a hawkish member of the Defense Policy Board and an assistant secretary of defense during the Reagan administration, acquired the Washington nicknames Prince of Darkness and Darth Vader in the 1980’s for his combative, take-no-prisoners pronouncements…
Throughout An End to Evil they purvey a worldview of us-versus-them, all-or-nothing, either-or, and this outlook results in a refusal to countenance the possibility that people who do not share the authors’ views about the war in Iraq or their faith in a pre-emptive, unilateralist foreign policy might have legitimate reasons for doing so. Instead, Mr. Frum and Mr. Perle accuse those who differ with their foreign-policy beliefs of failing to support the war against terrorism: of being cowardly, delusional or defeatist…Read full review