clocker bob wrote:
??? So you are saying that we were right to invade??
I think the invasion itself was justified. The actual manner in which it was carried out was debased by the participation of companies like Kellogg, Brown and Root, and so forth, but that's not to say that Hussein didn't need to be eradicated along with all of the psychotic nuts and toadies who surrounded him.
And, yes, I'm aware that the administration had ulterior motives in invading Iraq. You know that I am. I highly distrust the administration, as you also well know.
But the invasion itself, while completely bungled and mismanaged almost from the get-go, was justified.
clocker bob wrote: Who created the power vacuum? I don't think anyone on the left is saying that the US is solely to blame for the sectarian violence- are you arguing that the invasion and occupation are not the primary reasons for it?
I think a sizable amount of people are saying that very thing, and I think it's also callous and empty-headed.
While the "occupation", which has been handled horribly, is a major cause of the strife, there are also deep, historical (mainly religious) causes which are equally as important.
clocker bob wrote:
Are you saying Hitchens did not cheerlead for the war? Because it would be ridiculous if you are.
And he's crazy. He's a sideline sitter who lusts for great wars- therefore, a fascist.
Methinks you get off a little too much on being self-righteous on this issue. "Cheerleading" for the war is hardly how I'd put it--he carefully and consistently gave reasoned defenses for his positions. Whether those positions were valid or not, in no way is it equivalent to, say, the sort of "cheerleading" against the invasion engaged in by empty-headed and moralistic repeaters of cant that can be found at any anti-globalization rally.
He's a writer. It's his job to take positions on controversial issues. Don't get on some imaginary high horse.
[/quote]ezra klein wrote: In a 2003 interview, Hitchens said the events of September 11th filled him with "exhiliration."
His friend Ian Buruma, the writer, told me, "I don't quite see Christopher as a 'man of action,' but he's always looking for our defining moments--as it were, our Spanish Civil War, where you put yourself on the right side and stand up to the enemy." Hitchens foresaw "a war to the finish between everything I love and everything I hate." Here was a question on which history would judge him; and just as Orwell had (in his view) got it right on the great questions of the 20th century -- Communism, Fascism, and imperialism -- so Hitchens wanted a future student to see that he had been similarly clear-eyed (He once wrote, "I have tried for much of my life to write as if I was composing my sentences posthumously.)
Absorb that: This isn't about 9/11, or "Islamofascism," or repression in the Arab World. It's about Christopher Hitchens. It's about his need for an enemy great enough, dark enough, sinister enough, and threatening enough that he can match the exploits and courage of Orwell's unpopular, often courageous crusades.
It explains, too, why Hitchens and so many like him are quick to inflate the dangers posed by Islamic extremists, to make threats out of enemies and existential dangers out of garden variety terrorists. If they don't, if they allow al Qaeda to remain a degraded organization with limited operational capacity that should be mopped up through diligent law enforcement strategies, then where does that leave them in the eyes of history? Orwell battled against Communism, Hitchens is going to take a brave posture against 27 bearded nuts who want white men to leave their lands?
Of course not. So in his writings, "Islamofascism" subtly becomes communism circa-1962, an expansionist, attractive ideology bristling with nuclear weapons and demands that can neither be understood nor negotiated. It does that because nothing else is equal to the challenge of Christopher Hitchens:
"[My critics] want me to immolate myself, and I sincerely believe that, for some of them, when they see bad news from Iraq, the reaction is simply 'This will make Christopher Hitchens look bad!' I've been trying to avoid such solipsism, but I've come to believe there are such people.
Good job on dodging inflated self-regard. Hitchens literally believes this is about him. That what happens in Iraq reflects on him. That those who oppose it are quaking before Hitchens' moral clarity, and watching the IEDs for anything that will discredit this brave, occasional Slate columnist.
This entire news article has the rank odor of a piece solely dedicated to personality assassination. If we can portray Hitchens as a megalomaniac and a drunk, maybe we can avoid having to deal with his actual arguments.
Give me a break. What piffle. Such writers of penny-dreadful propaganda should be ashamed of their own stupidity. The claim that Hitchens cared nothing for the Iraqis and was only interested in his own professional reputation is backed by a couple of quotes taken out of context and then given the sort of spotlight that is commonly used for such glorified vandalism. It's just this sort of nonsense that I admire Hitchens for consistently revealing.
Here is a well-respected journalist who is nearing sixty, and whose personal and professional reputation is nearly spotless. He has consistently fought against authority, from lambasting Clinton to publicly ridiculing Reagan and George W. Bush. Give him the respect he deserves, even if you don't agree with him. Anything less would only betray your own Witch Hunt, paranoiac mentality.