« Banning Paul From Internet Polls | Main | Islamist Mickey » 16 May 2007 03:22 pm "Blowback"Last night, Ron Paul was savaged for daring to point out that sometimes our foreign policy interventions cause more long-term problems than they solve in the short term. I would have thought this was an obvious point, but it caused spluttering and outrage on the podium. Yes, we did nothing - nothing - to deserve 9/11 - and Paul should have said so forthrightly. But we are very foolish if we believe we can simply ignore the issue of blowback in this long war. In fact, in the battle against Jihadist terror, the point seems to me to be more relevant than in most wars. One indispensable element of our long-term success is winning over Arab and Muslim populations to the cause of democracy, secularism, moderate Islam and global integration. The more Arabs and Muslims feel alienated and attacked by the U.S.. the more support terror will get, and the more power al Qaeda gains. My hope for the Iraq war was that by removing a dictator, providing democracy, and ensuring stability and development, the US could reverse this tide by one bold gambit. I was naive, of course, and under-estimated both the resilience of anti-Western sentiment among Arabs and Muslims and also the competence and honesty of the Bush administration. The bottom line, however, is that the actual war as it has been waged in Iraq has not just failed in its basic purpose - to get rid of WMDs that did not exist - but it has actually been a major victory for al Qaeda in moving Muslim opinion their way. It is not just a defeat for the US; it is a huge win for the enemy. Josh Muravchik explains the damage:
The question serious supporters of a real war on terror must now ask is: will continuing the fight in Iraq help reverse this trend or cement it for decades to come? Is the war making us less secure and the world much less safe? Would withdrawal or continued engagement makes things better? At the very least, it seems to me, this question should be on the table in the Iraq debate. And yet the Republicans - with the exception of Ron Paul - don't even want to talk about it. Until they do, they are not a party serious about national security. TrackBack URL for this entry:http://www.typepad.com/services/trackback/6a00d83451c45669e200d8351b757453ef Listed below are links to weblogs that reference '"Blowback"' |
