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Eric Alterman: The Coming 'Stab in the Back' Campaign

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babylonsister Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 07:22 PM
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Eric Alterman: The Coming 'Stab in the Back' Campaign
The Coming 'Stab in the Back' Campaign

Eric Alterman




Having exposed their country to the ignominy of certain defeat in Iraq, the Bush Administration and its neoconservative allies are seeking to salvage their crumbling reputations by blaming their critics for the catastrophe their policies have wrought. We are witnessing the foundation for a post-Iraq "stab in the back" campaign.

The tactic--Dolchstoßlegende, which means, literally, "dagger stab legend"--is associated with attacks by German anti-Semites on Jews in the aftermath of World War I and is a familiar response for frustrated American right-wingers when reality fails to live up to their ideological fantasies. Following the inevitable collapse of nationalist China, unhinged accusations of a liberal conspiracy inside the US government that purposely "lost" China to the Commies ruled the foreign policy debate. Consider these words from GOP Senator William Jenner of Indiana: "This country today is in the hands of a secret inner coterie which is directed by agents of the Soviet Union.... secret invisible government... led our country down the road to destruction." The China lobby--the AIPAC of its day--tirelessly policed American politics to insure that no one with national aspiration dared recognize the reality of the Communist Chinese victory.

During Vietnam, Ronald Reagan tried to blame protesters for killing troops, charging, "Some American will die tonight because of the activity in our streets." The right created the myth of antiwar protesters spitting on soldiers, although a detailed study by Jerry Lembcke, in his The Spitting Image: Myth, Memory and the Legacy of Vietnam, found not a single verifiable incident of such behavior. And while it is a given among conservatives--and even reporters--that critical media coverage somehow hampered the war effort, Daniel Hallin's The Uncensored War notes that most reports, particularly on television, rarely deviated from patriotic, pro-American assumptions. Indeed, the Army's official history of the media's role in the conflict, published by the Army Center of Military History, explicitly rejects this line. None of this prevented Norman Podhoretz from reviving the charge in 1982 with a thinly researched book-length essay called Why We Were in Vietnam. Fortunately, the country was not in the mood; the vast majority of Americans surveyed over the past thirty years have said US involvement was a mistake from the start. (Nowhere in his book did Podhoretz admit that one of those leftists calling explicitly for a US defeat was the then-editor of Commentary--a fellow by the name of "Norman Podhoretz." He argued in 1971 that a Vietcong victory was preferable to "the indefinite and unlimited bombardment by American pilots in American planes of every country in that already devastated region.")

The coming campaign's foundations are already in place. They rest on three building blocks: an attack on the loyalty of those willing to recognize reality; the construction of an alternative reality in which victory is deemed to be imminent; and, finally, a shifting of blame for a supposedly premature withdrawal to those who refuse to play along.

Matthew Yglesias, in the Center for American Progress's "Think Again" column, noticed preparations for such a campaign as early as May 2004. Roll Call's Morton Kondracke pretended that "the media and politicians" were "in danger of talking the United States into defeat in Iraq," while Tony Blankley of the Washington Times added, "the president's political and media opposition want the president's defeat more than America's victory." Two years later, when most Americans had turned against the war, Spencer Ackerman, writing in The New Republic, noticed that not a single contributor to a National Review symposium advocated withdrawal. Typical were comments like those of former Bush Pentagon analyst Michael Rubin, who announced, "The US is losing in Iraq because American politicians and the general public have not decided they want or need to win."

George W. Bush has both feet firmly planted in the "stab" camp, and offered it aid and comfort when he tried to link the "unmistakable legacy of Vietnam"--"boat people," "re-education camps" and "killing fields"--to calls for withdrawal from Iraq. Podhoretz's recent entry into the sweepstakes is, appropriately, a retread of his 1982 attack on his ex-friends and former self. In his clinically delusional book World War IV, Podhoretz paints Bush as a "great president" and professes to see in Iraq "enormous strides that had been made in democratizing and unifying the country under a workable federal system." No less implausibly, he compares war opponents, like former National Security Advisers Zbigniew Brzezinski and Brent Scowcroft, to a "domestic insurgency" with a "life-and-death stake" in America's defeat. Podhoretz flatters himself and his fellow armchair generals with his claim that his screeds in Commentary and the Wall Street Journal editorial pages represent a "war of ideas...no less bloody than the one being fought by our troops in the Middle East."

more...

http://www.thenation.com/doc/20071015/alterman
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Solly Mack Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 07:24 PM
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1. Yep...
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MadMaddie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 07:57 PM
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2. Yea....and it's up to us to keep the * Adminsitratiion fresh in
the minds of Americans.
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Mythsaje Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 07:57 PM
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3. Response:
"Or maybe, you dumbasses, we lost because you stupid <bleep>ers didn't take a second to figure out what you were getting us into before you did it. Because you ignored us when we SAID you were being stupid <bleep>ers and went and did it anyway. It was an unnecessary war, driven by a two-bit Napoleonic President with delusions of grandeur that any sane society would've locked in a mental ward rather than electing to the highest goddamn office in the land.

"We lost because you're a bunch of crazed nitwits about as sharp as cotton candy."
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illinoisprogressive Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 08:28 PM
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4. nothing like endless war
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Demeter Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 08:36 PM
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5. With Bush's Record, He'll End Up Stabbing Himself and the GOP Instead
Good riddance to bad rubbish.
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roseBudd Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 09:12 PM
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6. It may not work except with the most dedicated dittoheads because of the incompetence
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Vogon_Glory Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Oct-04-07 10:25 PM
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7. Let Us Also Remind Posterity That The Bushies Waged War Incompetently
Let us remind posterity that the Bushies waged both the Iraq and the Afghan wars incompetently. In Afghanistan, Buckaroo Bush let his attention waver, let Osama bin Laden get away, and let the Taliban regroup in Waziristan because he couldn't be bothered to destroy al Qaeda's Afghan Siamese twin. Let us also rub the Right's noses in the fact that they waged the Iraq debacle incompetently. They failed to secure and destroy the Iraqi Army's ammunition dumps, discharged the Iraqi army, and failed to follow what had been accepted practice for administering occupied countries after World War II.

Colin Powell once said if we broke it, we own it. The Bushies ignored his advice. The US broke Iraq and failed to put it back together.
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