[images
added by this website] Thursday, September 18,
2003 [source] Thinking
About Neoconservatism By Kevin
MacDonald OVER the last year, there's been a
torrent of articles on neoconservatism
raising (usually implicitly) some vexing
issues: Are neoconservatives different
from other conservatives? Is
neoconservatism a Jewish movement? Is it
"anti-Semitic"
to say so? The dispute between the neocons
and more traditional conservatives -
"paleoconservatives"
- is especially important because the
latter now find themselves on the outside,
looking in on the conservative power
structure. Hopefully, some of the venom has been
taken out of this argument by the
remarkable recent article
by neoconservative "godfather" Irving
Kristol ("The Neoconservative
Persuasion," Weekly Standard,
August 25, 2003). With commendable
frankness, Kristol admitted that "the historical task and
political purpose of neoconservatism
would seem to be this: to convert the
Republican party, and American
conservatism in general, against their
respective wills, into a new kind of
conservative politics suitable to
governing a modern democracy." And, equally frankly, Kristol eschewed
any attempt to justify U.S. support for
Israel in terms of American national
interest: "[L]arge nations,
whose identity is ideological, like the
Soviet Union of yesteryear and the
United States of today, inevitably have
ideological interests in addition to
more material concerns. That is why we
feel it necessary to defend Israel
today, when its survival is threatened.
No complicated geopolitical
calculations of national interest are
necessary." If the US is an "ideological" nation,
this can only mean that the motivations of
neoconservative ideology are a legitimate
subject of intellectual inquiry. For example, it is certainly true that
the neocons' foreign
policy fits well with a plausible
version of Jewish interests, but is
arguably only tenuously related to the
interests
of the U.S. Also, neocons oppose the
isolationism of important sections of
traditional American conservatism. And
neocon attitudes on issues like race and
immigration differ profoundly from those
of traditional mainstream conservatives -
but resemble closely the common attitudes
of the wider American Jewish
community. Count me among those who accept that
the Jewish
commitment of leading neoconservatives
has become a critical influence on U.S.
policies, and that the effectiveness of
the neoconservatives is greatly enhanced
by their alliance with the organized
Jewish community. In my opinion, this
conclusion is based on solid data and
reasonable inferences. But like any other
theory, of course, it is subject to
reasoned discussion and disproof. We shouldn't
be surprised by the importance of
ethnicity in human affairs. Nor should
we be intimidated by charges of
anti-Semitism. We should be able to
discuss these issues openly and
honestly. This is a practical matter,
not a moral one. Ethnic politics in the U.S. are
certainly not limited to Jewish
activism. They are an absolutely
normal phenomenon throughout history and
around the world. But for well over half a century, with
rare
exceptions, Jewish influence has been
off-limits for rational discussion. Now,
however, as the U.S. acquires an empire in
the Middle East, this ban must inevitably
fall
away. My views on these issues are shaped by
my research
on several other influential
Jewish-dominated intellectual and
political movements, including the Boasian
school of anthropology, Freudian
psychoanalysis, the Frankfurt School of
Social Research, Marxism and several other
movements of the radical left, as well as
the movement to change the ethnic balance
of the United States by allowing mass,
non-traditional immigration. My conclusion: Contemporary
neoconservatism fits into the general
pattern of Jewish intellectual and
political activism I have identified in my
work. I am not, of course, saying that all
Jews, or even most Jews, supported these
movements. Nor did these movements work in
concert: some were intensely hostile to
one another. I am saying, however, that
the key figures in these movements
identified in some sense as Jews and
viewed their participation as in some
sense advancing Jewish interests. In all of the Jewish intellectual and
political movements I studied, there is a
strong Jewish identity among the core
figures. All center on charismatic Jewish
leaders - people such as Boas,
Trotsky and Freud - who are
revered as messianic, god-like
figures. Neoconservatism's key founders trace
their intellectual ancestry to the "New
York Intellectuals," a group that
originated as followers of Trotskyite
theoretician Max Schactman in the
1930s and centered around influential
journals like Partisan Review and
Commentary (which is in fact
published by the American
Jewish Committee). In the case of
neoconservatives, their early identity as
radical leftist disciples shifted as there
began to be evidence of anti-Semitism in
the Soviet Union. Key figures in leading
them out of the political left were
philosopher Sidney Hook and Elliot Cohen,
editor of Commentary. Such men as Hook,
Irving Kristol, Norman Podhoretz, Nathan
Glazer and Seymour Martin
Lipset, were deeply concerned about
anti-Semitism and other Jewish issues.
Many of them worked closely with Jewish
activist organizations. After the 1950s,
they became increasingly disenchanted with
leftism. Their overriding concern was the
welfare of Israel. By
the 1970s, the neocons were taking an
aggressive stance against the Soviet
Union, which they saw as a bastion of
anti-Semitism and opposition to Israel.
Richard Perle (right) was
the prime organizer of Congressional
support for the 1974 Jackson-Vanik
Amendment which angered the Soviet
Union by linking bilateral trade issues to
freedom of emigration, primarily of Jews
from the Soviet Union to Israel and the
United States. Current key leaders include an
astonishing
number of individuals well placed to
influence the Bush Administration:
(Paul Wolfowitz, Richard Perle, Douglas
Feith, I. Lewis Libby, Elliott Abrams,
John Bolton, David Wurmser, Abram
Shulsky), interlocking media and
thinktankdom (Bill Kristol, Michael
Ledeen, Stephen Bryen, John Podhoretz,
Daniel Pipes), and the academic world
(Richard Pipes, Donald Kagan). As the neoconservatives lost faith in
radical leftism, several key
neocons became attracted to the
writings
of Leo Strauss, a classicist and
political philosopher at the University of
Chicago. Strauss had a very strong Jewish
identity and viewed his philosophy as a
means of ensuring Jewish survival in the
Diaspora. As he put it in a 1962 Hillel
House lecture, later republished
in Leo Strauss: Political Philosopher
and Jewish Thinker: "I believe I can say, without
any exaggeration, that since a very,
very early time the main theme of my
reflections has been what is called the
'Jewish 'Question'." Strauss has become a cult figure - the
quintessential rabbinical guru with
devoted disciples. While Strauss and his followers have
come to be known as neoconservatives - and
have even claimed to be simply
"conservatives"- there is nothing
conservative about their goals. This
is most obviously the case in foreign
policy, where they are attempting to
rearrange the entire Middle East in the
interests of Israel. But it is also the
case with domestic policy, where
acceptance of rule by an aristocratic
elite would require a complete political
transformation. Strauss believed that this
aristocracy would be compatible with
Jewish interests. Strauss notoriously described the need
for an external exoteric language directed
at outsiders, and an internal esoteric
language directed at ingroup members. In
other words, the masses had to be
deceived. But actually this is a general feature
of the movements
I have studied. They invariably frame
issues in language that appeals to
non-Jews, rather than explicitly in terms
of Jewish interests. The most common
rhetoric used by Jewish intellectual and
political movements has been the language
of moral universalism and the language of
science-languages that appeal to the
educated elites of the modern Western
world. But beneath the rhetoric it is easy
to find statements expressing the Jewish
agendas of the principal actors. For example, anthropologists under the
leadership of Boas viewed their crusade
against the concept of "race" as, in turn,
combating anti-Semitism. They also saw
their theories as promoting the ideology
of cultural pluralism, which served
perceived Jewish interests because the
U.S. would be seen as consisting of many
co-equal cultures rather than as a
European Christian society. Similarly, psychoanalysts commonly used
their theories to portray anti-Jewish
attitudes as symptoms of psychiatric
disorder. Conversely, the earlier generation of
American Jewish Trotskyites ignored the
horrors
of the Soviet
Union until the emergence there of
state-sponsored anti-Semitism. Neoconservatives have certainly
appealed to American patriotic platitudes
in advocating war throughout the Middle
East-gushing about spreading American
democracy and freedom to the area, while
leaving unmentioned their own strong
ethnic ties and family links to
Israel. Michael Lind has called
attention to the neoconservatives' "odd
bursts of ideological enthusiasm for
'democracy'"- odd because these calls for
democracy and freedom throughout the
Middle East are also coupled with support
for the Likud Party and other like-minded
groups in Israel that are driven by a
vision of an ethnocentric,
expansionist Israel that, to outside
observers at least, bears an unmistakable
(albeit unmentionable) resemblance to
apartheid South Africa. These inconsistencies of the
neoconservatives are not odd or
surprising. The Straussian idea is to
achieve the aims of the elite ingroup by
using language designed for mass appeal.
War for "democracy and freedom" sells much
better than a war explicitly aimed at
achieving the foreign policy goals of
Israel. Neoconservatives
have responded to charges that their
foreign policy has a Jewish agenda by
labeling
any such analysis as "anti-Semitic."
Similar charges have been echoed by
powerful activist Jewish organizations
like the ADL
and the Simon
Wiesenthal Center. But at the
very least, Jewish neoconservatives
like Paul Wolfowitz, who were
deeply involved in pushing for the war
in Iraq, should frankly discuss how
their close family and personal ties to
Israel have affected their attitudes on
US foreign policy in the Middle East.
Wolfowitz
(right), however, has refused to
discuss this issue beyond terming such
suggestions "disgraceful." A common
argument is that neoconservatism is
not Jewish because of the presence of
various non-Jews amongst their ranks. But in fact, the ability to recruit
prominent non-Jews, while nevertheless
maintaining a Jewish core and a commitment
to Jewish interests, has been a hallmark -
perhaps the key hallmark - of influential
Jewish intellectual and political
movements throughout the 20th century.
Freud commented famously on the need for a
non-Jew to represent psychoanalysis, a
role
played by Ernest Jones and
C. G. Jung. Margaret Mead
and Ruth Benedict were the public
face of Boasian anthropology. And, although
Jews represented over half the
membership of both the Socialist Party
and the Communist Party USA at various
times, neither party ever had Jews as
presidential candidates and no Jew held
the top position in the Communist Party
USA after 1929. In all the Jewish intellectual and
political movements I reviewed, non-Jews
have been accepted and given
highly-visible roles. Today, those roles
are played most prominently by Dick
Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld
whose ties with neoconservatives go back
many years. It makes excellent
psychological sense to have the
spokespeople for any movement resemble the
people they are trying to convince. In fact, neoconservatism is rather
unusual in the degree to which policy
formulation - as opposed to implementation
- is so predominantly Jewish. Perhaps this
reflects U.S. conditions in the late 20th
century. All the Jewish intellectual and
political movements I studied were
typified by a deep sense of orthodoxy - a
sense of "us versus them." Dissenters are
expelled, usually amid character
assassination and other
recriminations. This has certainly been a feature of
the neocon movement. The classic recent
example of this "We vs. They" world is
David Frum's attack
on "unpatriotic conservatives" as
anti-Semites. Any conservative who opposes
the Iraq war as contrary to U.S. interests
and who notes the pro-Israeli motivation
of many of the important players, is not
to be argued with, but eradicated. "We
turn our backs on them." This is not the
spirit out of which the Anglo-American
parliamentary tradition was developed, and
in fact was not
endorsed by other non-Jewish pro-war
conservatives. Jewish intellectual and political
movements have typically had ready access
to prestigious mainstream media channels,
and this is certainly true for the
neocons. The anchoring by The
Washington Post of the columns of
Charles
Krauthammer and Robert
Kagan and by The New York
Times of William
Safire's illustrates this. But
probably more important recently has been
the invariable summoning of
neoconservatives to represent the
"conservative" line on the TV Networks. Is
it unreasonable to suppose that this may
be somewhat influenced by the famously
heavy Jewish role in these
operations? Immigration policy provides a valuable
acid test for the proposition that
neoconservatism is actually a vehicle for
perceived Jewish ethnic interests. I
believe I have been able to demonstrate
that pro-immigration elements in American
public life have, for over a century, been
largely led, funded, energized and
organized by the Jewish community
[PDF
file]. American Jews have taken
this line, with a few isolated exceptions,
because they have believed, as Leonard
S. Glickman, president and CEO of the
Hebrew
Immigrant Aid Society, has bluntly
stated,
"The more diverse American society is the
safer [Jews] are." Having run out
of Russian Jews, the HIAS
is now deeply involved in recruiting
refugees from Africa. When, in the middle 1990s an
immigration reform movement arose amongst
American conservatives, the reaction of
the neoconservatives ranged from cold to
hostile. No positive voice was permitted
on the Op-Ed page of the Wall Street
Journal, by then a neoconservative
domain. (Perhaps significantly, a more
recent exception has been a relatively
favorable review
of the anti-illegal immigration book
Mexifornia - whose author, the
military historian Victor Davis
Hanson, has distinguished himself by
the extreme
hawkishness of his views on the Middle
East.) The main vehicle of immigration
reform sentiment, National Review,
once a bastion
of traditional conservative thought, was
quite quickly captured
by neoconservatives and its opposition to
immigration reduced to nominal. Prior to the post-9/11 U.S. invasion of
the Middle East, this suppression of the
immigration reform impulse among
conservatives was probably the single most
important contribution of the
neoconservatives to the course of U.S.
history. It may yet prove to be the most
disastrous. Kevin
MacDonald
is Professor of Psychology at California
State University-Long
Beach. Related
items on this website: - Origins
of anti-Semitism
- Conrad
Black's media empire totters
-
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