A Jeremiad Against the Establishment

“a prince … cannot observe all of those virtues for which men are reputed good, because it is often necessary to act against mercy, against faith, against humanity, against frankness, against religion, in order to preserve the state.”

Codevilla takes the US severely to task for its failure to follow the rules in Iraq and the broader Middle East. His critique should be read in full. It’s not what most, either conservative or liberal, neocon or realist or defeatist, are accustomed to hearing. But, it cuts to the heart of our bleeding for four years, and the limited best outcomes we face. Codevilla has been consistently opposed to our entering Iraq, seeing bigger game afoot, and the confusion of our aims. He’s been proven correct, so far. His forecast, therefore, should be taken seriously. Most important, his indictment of our befuddled policy class requires a new realism in Washington.”

A weakness in Codevilla’s analysis is that while he correctly identifies the culpability of regional Arab states and Iran in sponsoring and tolerating terrorist groups and argues for meaningful penalties to be applied to such regimes, he overestimates the competency and resiliency of these states and simply dismisses the extent to which globalization has made non-state actors functionally independent of state patrons, who are quite helpful operationally but are no longer the existential requirement they once were in the 1970’s.  Economics and network-theory are entirely absent from Codevilla’s analytical framework and while Islamic religious identity is admirably included, it is considered a primarily reactive (even understandably so) phenomenon, which even a casual study of the 120 year evolution of Islamist ideology would refute. States still rule all, in Codevilla’s vision, an assumption that deserves careful reexamination. 

Nevertheless, a worthwhile and thought-provoking critique.

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  2. Dan tdaxp:

    There was to be no occupation.

    If only we had not engaged in such a stupid post-war.

    PS: For some reason, the "Name (required) field is right aligned somewhere to the right of the edge of the text-box.

  3. zen:

    Weird…I’m not seeing that here…but thank you. I’ll have Mrs. Z. look at that tonight.

    We did nearly everything the wrong way when it was possible to go right and where it was not possible Bremer and Sanchez endeavored to turn problems into calamities.

  4. Larry:

    "We did nearly everything the wrong way when it was possible to go right …"

    I wonder if this is actually true any more. I know we know the right way. The modern war campain against the Native Americans were highly successful. However, we are talking about 25 milion people in Iraq. While modern technology makes slaughter even easier and EBO makes the outcome well known, it apears that Saddam made the horizontal force of that country even stronger than we knew, instead of weaker. The horizontal force being between the people of that society. Even if our nonkinetic methods have improved, as tight as that society turned out to be (closer tribal connections than we thought), it would have been a formidible job of winning hearts and minds indeed, even done correctly. 

    But then I agree, if we could have kept the government and military intact and isolated, there could have been some hope for subverting them in their relationship with their people. At least the monetary cost of the war, at least our share, would have been lower by now, any freer or democratic I am not sure.

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