By
PATRICK J. BUCHANAN
In
introducing his new book, Leo Strauss and the Conservative Movement in America, Paul Gottfried identifies a fundamental
divide between neoconservatives and the traditional right. The divide is
over the question: What is this nation, America?
Straussians, writes
Gottfried, “wish to present the construction of government as an
open-ended rationalist process. All children of the Enlightenment, once
properly instructed, should be able to carry out this … task.”
For traditional
conservatives, before the nation is born, ”ethnic and cultural
preconditions” must exist. All “successful constitutional orders,” he
writes, “are the expressions of already formed nations and cultures.”
To the old right, America as
a nation and a people already existed by 1789. The Constitution was the
birth certificate the nation wrote for itself, the charter by which it
chose to govern itself. The real America had been born in men’s hearts by
the time of Lexington and Concord in 1775.
In a recent issue of Modern Age,
Jack Kerwick deals with this divide.
Irving Kristol, he writes, and quotes that founding father of modern neoconservatism, saw America as “a ‘creedal’ nation, a nation to which anyone can belong irrespective of ‘ethnicity or blood ties of any kind, or lineage, or length of residence even.’”
“For Kristol and his ilk,”
Kerwick goes on, “one’s identity as an American is established by nothing
more than an intellectual exercise whereby one rationally assents to the
propositions encapsulated in the Declaration.”
“Given this unqualified
quasi-religious commitment to ‘the Rights of Man,’ (for a neoconservative)
America must be future-oriented, for as long as human rights are
threatened, and regardless of where they are imperiled, her work in the
world will never be complete.”
Here one arrives at a root
cause of the conflict between neocons and the right–a conflict that did
not mature until the end of the Cold War.
Given their belief in
America as an ideological nation and their fear that the party of George
McGovern and Jimmy Carter was failing to wage the Cold War effectively
against our ideological foe, communism, it was natural that the neocons
would defect from their party to align with the party of Ronald Reagan.
By the 1980s, they were
allies of the Old Right for the last decade of the Cold War.
It was when that Cold War
ended that the chasm came into full view.
Some conservatives began to
argue that now that the Soviet Union was history and Mao’s China had given
up on world revolution, our war was over and we should bring our troops
home and become again, ”a normal country in a normal time.”
Neoconservatives cried that
this was “isolationism,” and backed U.S. interventions in Panama, Haiti,
Somalia, Kuwait and Iraq.
While a Republican House
opposed war on Serbia, neocons cheered Bill Clinton’s 78 days of bombing
that tore Kosovo from the mother country.
When some on the right
opposed the invasion of Iraq as an unwise and unnecessary war,National Review denounced them as ”unpatriotic.”
On reflection, the
neoconservative rage made sense.
If one believes America is
not a normal nation with definable interests, but a creedal nation
dedicated to democracy, equality and human rights, one has converted to
what Kristol called a “civic religion.” And the mission of that faith is
to advance the work begun in 1776, to make America–then the entire
world–free, democratic and egalitarian.
Either our ideology triumphs
or another shall, neocons believe. We are in a world historic struggle for
the hearts and souls of mankind.
This ideology, this
political religion, causes neocons, as Gottfried and Russell Kirk observed
— the latter in his 1988 Heritage Foundation lecture on the species — to
see opponents on the right as heretics and enemies of the true faith.
Yet, in the final analysis,
the neoconservatism of Irving Kristol, writes Kerwick, future-oriented and
utopian, “is not … a form of conservatism at all.”
Decades ago, when Irving
called for a “Republican ideology,” the scholar Gerhart Niemeyer upbraided
him: “All modern ideologies have the same irrational root: the permeation
of politics with millenarian ideas of pseudo-religious character. The
result is a dream world.”
Like 19th-century Marxists,
neocons envision a future that is utopian–i.e., it is unattainable. For in
the real world, history, faith and culture shape peoples, and peoples
shape countries to reflect who and what they are.
Nations constructed from
ideological blueprints like the Soviet Union of Vladimir Lenin and the
China of Mao Zedong eventually collapse when their ruling ideas collide
fatally with reality and human nature.
The one great success of the
neocons came about by accident. In the shock of 9/11, George W. Bush was
converted to global democratic revolution “to end tyranny in our world.”
And off we marched.
And after decade-long wars
in Afghanistan and Iraq, we reaped the harvest: 6,500 dead, 40,000
wounded, trillions in debt, a nation divided and pandemic hatred of
America across the Islamic world.
Perhaps the new wars for
which our neocons clamor in Syria and Iran will prove at last the great
leap forward into the brave new world of their dreams.
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