Wednesday, April 04, 2007

The Lunatics Still (Try To) Run The Asylum

Inside the neo-con echo chamber

By Eli Clifton

With the United States bogged down in an increasingly ugly war in Iraq, tensions rising between Tehran and Washington, and public sentiment - which has turned en masse against deeper US commitment in the Middle East - often seeming a non-factor in White House decision-making, it is hard to believe that in the past few months some pundits and politicos have been optimistically predicting a dramatic shift in US foreign policy that could, like a deus ex machina, resolve the country's overseas debacles.

The Iraq Study Group (ISG), co-chaired by inside-the-Beltway heavyweights James Baker and former congressman Lee Hamilton, seemed to represent the "adult supervision" so desperately lacking in the blind idealism - or, as others see it, fervid ideology - behind the Bush administration's misadventures in the Middle East.

While President George W Bush reportedly called the ISG report a "flaming turd", some observers have held on to the hope that at the very least one cornerstone of the current political scene, the neo-conservatives, at long last are being pushed out the door, and along with them their radical ideas about reshaping the Middle East.

"Like Bush, [the neo-conservatives] look to the long span of history for vindication. It will indeed be eons before anyone trusts them again," wrote Financial Times columnist Jacob Weisberg in March, after recounting his disappointment at the lack of contrition or regret expressed by neo-conservatives for the bungled war in Iraq.

Although many of the core Bush neo-cons, including Paul Wolfowitz and Douglas Feith, have been pushed out of the administration, and recent weeks have witnessed the emergence of a more conciliatory posture toward America's "enemies" that is the antithesis of neo-conservative policy proposals, neo-conservatism remains a force to contend with. This fact is highlighted by the influence of American Enterprise Institute (AEI) ideologues in shaping the "surge" plan announced by Bush in January.

So how do they do it?
One partial answer to this puzzle is the continued strength of neo-conservatism and its standard-bearers in the US media, a point made recently by Gideon Rachman in the Financial Times. Wrote Rachman: "The neo-cons stand accused of many errors: imperialism, Leninism, Trotskyism (New York school), militarism. Some believe that the real problem is that so many of them are Jewish - this is an alarmingly popular theme, to judge by my e-mails. But the problem with the neo-cons is not that so many of them are Jews. The problem is that so many of them are journalists."

Calling neo-conservative media pundits "journalists" is a stretch - the fact is, most don't report, they spin - but Rachman's point is a good one. From top to bottom, from tabloid TV like Fox News to powerhouse newspapers like the New York Times and Washington Post, neo-conservatives have an extraordinary presence in the US media. And Washington always seems to be listening.

A case in point has been the fate of the ISG. Even before the release of the ISG Report, the neo-conservative media outlets and pundits began a campaign of discrediting the Baker-Hamilton group and describing its policy recommendations as a blueprint for defeat in Iraq and the "war on terror".

In a late-November Weekly Standard editorial, one week before the ISG report was to be released, former Republican House Speaker and AEI fellow Newt Gingrich warned that any proposal to ask Iran and Syria for assistance in stabilizing Iraq was a sign of "defeat" and "appeasement".

Three days later, in a Washington Post editorial, Iraq war hawk Charles Krauthammer ridiculed the ISG's suggestion that engaging regional actors in the Middle East might help to secure stability in Iraq. He opined: "Perhaps in some long-term future they will want a stable Iraq as a tame client state of the Syria-Iran axis. For now they want chaos. What in God's name will a negotiation with them yield?"

Several days after the release of the ISG Report, perhaps even further emboldened by the Bush administration's declaration that it was not prepared to follow the ISG advice to engage with Syria and Iran, Robert Kagan and William Kristol wrote: "The Iraq Study Group, aided by supportive American media, has successfully conveyed the impression to everyone at home and abroad that the United States is about to withdraw from Iraq."

The ISG Report was quickly sidelined and in its place the nation was presented with a new plan for "victory", one apparently inspired in part by the AEI and vociferously promoted by the entire neo-con media infrastructure. Bush announced his surge plan on national television, in front of an audience that, in large part, wanted nothing to do with it. Part of the success of the surge push no doubt lies with Bush and his own ideas. But there is little doubt that the neo-con promotion machine weighed heavily.

To understand the media network of the neo-conservatives, it is helpful to examine the origins of the movement and how the packaging - and repackaging - of neo-conservative ideas has evolved over the past several decades.

Irving Kristol, widely regarded as a founder of neo-conservatism and a self-described "liberal who was mugged by reality", made his early mark largely in the areas of journalism and publishing in the 1950s and 1960s. But the early intellectualism of his various journals such as Commentary gave short shrift to such things as policy implementation. Rather, under Kristol's stewardship, early neo-conservatism tended to the philosophical, debate, and thoughtful - if increasingly ideological - critiques of the trajectory of the US and its domestic and foreign policies.

Together with the likes of Norman Podhoretz, who took over Commentary after Kristol departed, and a host of like-minded "public intellectuals", early neo-conservatism was more an intellectual conversation among a small "band of brothers" - as conservative author George Weigel once put it - than a Washington political faction. Kristol also founded the culture journal Public Interest in 1965, and in 1985 the foreign-affairs journal National Interest.

Both Interests have had overlapping contributors; they were also both bully pulpits for neo-conservative heavyweights such as Francis Fukuyama, Richard Pipes and Krauthammer. The origins of the neo-conservatives' stances on social security, the "culture wars", Generation X, crime and punishment and post-Cold War thought can be traced back to articles published in these journals.

Irving Kristol played an important role in creating the space for sharing ideas and ideology crucial to the evolution of the neo-conservative vision. His publications were widely read among academic and intellectual sympathizers of the movement; however, their distribution and reach were not comparable to mainstream periodicals'.

But even at this early stage in its development, there were signs of what neo-conservatism would evolve into by the 1990s. Not long after Podhoretz took over the editorship of Commentary in 1960, the style of the magazine turned sharply bellicose, in line with
Podhoretz' own evolving left-to-right political trajectory.

Andrew Bacevich wrote in his 2005 book The New American Militarism: "Podhoretz did much to create and refine the fiercely combative neo-conservative style. That style emphasized not balance (viewed as evidence of timidity) or the careful sifting of evidence (suggesting scholasticism) but the ruthless demolition of any point of view inconsistent with the neo-conservative version of truth, typically portrayed as self-evident and beyond dispute."

However, it wasn't until the 1995 founding of The Weekly Standard by Irving Kristol's son William that a definitive shift in the media presence of neo-conservatism truly took hold, and the impact of the political group inside Washington began to shift. Unlike Commentary and other early neo-conservative journals, The Weekly Standard, owned by the News Corporation, the media conglomerate of Rupert Murdoch, was not targeted at intellectual elites. Rather, it was targeted at conservative power brokers. Under the editorship of William Kristol and Fred Barnes, the Standard undertook an explicit mission to effect immediate changes in policy and to serve as a reflection of neo-conservative policy campaigns on current affairs. The pretense of intellectualism disappeared.

The influence of The Weekly Standard runs all the way to the top of the US government. Vice President Dick Cheney's office at one time reportedly received 30 issues per week, apparently to remain on top of any policy recommendations advocated by AEI (where Cheney and his wife have both held positions) and the Project for the New American Century (PNAC), two neo-conservative groups with close ties to the management of The Weekly Standard.

The Weekly Standard has served a pivotal role in what could be considered the neo-conservative "echo chamber" - a collection of think-tanks, media outlets and advocacy groups that strengthen and repeat neo-conservative policies and ideology through constant media exposure and reinforcement within organizations populated by influential policymakers. Only with this system in place have the neo-conservatives, a group with no grassroots support base, been successful in influencing US foreign policy as well as public opinion.

A significant component of the neo-conservative echo chamber is its use of mainstream media to disseminate ideas. Neither the academic journals nor neo-conservative periodicals have the readership and crucial role in public opinion of the mainstream media. Both the editorial pages of major newspapers and the Fox News cable channel have played pivotal roles in selling neo-conservative policies to a more mainstream, conservative and Republican audience.

Max Boot at the Los Angeles Times, David Brooks at the New York Times, Charles Krauthammer and Robert Kagan at the Washington Post and numerous members of the Wall Street Journal editorial board, including Irving Kristol since 1972, have served as liaisons between neo-conservative writers and mainstream America.

Fox News, launched in 1996 by Murdoch's News Corp, has served as one of the media outlets of choice for Bush administration rhetoric as well as high-profile neo-conservatives. For personalities such as Bill Kristol, Fox News has served as a springboard from which to launch himself into mainstream media circles.

The outrage and patriotic rhetoric and images employed by Fox News cast neo-conservative ideas and policy in consumable and marketable packaging. Never before had the neo-conservatives gained such a mainstream audience. The views of the Bush administration, as well as PNAC and various other neo-conservative groups, were regularly publicized through Fox News and regional-newspaper editorial pages during the lead-up to the war in Iraq. The sprinkling of neo-conservative writers and pundits throughout the US mainstream media served an invaluable role in pushing for neo-conservative-crafted Mideast policy.

The impact and influence of the neo-conservative echo chamber was felt when accusations of an Iraqi program for weapons of mass destruction and charges that Saddam Hussein's regime was harboring al-Qaeda members flooded the mainstream media during the buildup to the invasion of Iraq. Despite the factual inaccuracy of nearly all the Bush administration's justifications for invading Iraq, the media and policy lobbying wings of the neo-conservative camp successfully disseminated their message and promoted their vision of a democratized, US-friendly Iraq.

To argue that neo-conservative influence is truly on the wane, as Fukuyama and others have claimed, is to ignore the continued impact of this echo chamber. Unlike the early years of the movement, today's neo-conservatives enjoy a serious - and powerful - presence within the mainstream US media. Though this level does not generate the political faction's ideas and policies, it does generate influence. Access to the gates of mainstream media has enabled the movement to actually implement and market its objectives to Americans.

The attainment of this power owes a great deal to the early neo-cons who saw value in becoming "gatekeepers" of information and ideas. Starting with Irving Kristol's early days at Commentary, the movement gained a voice, but one largely aimed at intellectual and academic elites. In fact, the evolution of the neo-con movement parallels the growth of its founders as publishers and media figures. Later, when Bill Kristol founded The Weekly Standard, the neo-conservatives could present specific policy objectives to Washington elites.

Not by any accident, the neo-conservatives' time of greatest influence on US foreign policy coincided with the explosive growth of mass-media outlets from which they could promote their policies. The omnipresent fluttering US flag on Fox News exemplifies the new ueber-patriotic packaging through which the invasion of Afghanistan, the invasion of Iraq and the escalation of tensions with Iran are marketed packages.

When asked why The Weekly Standard and Fox News have increased in popularity over the past few years, Matt Labash, a senior writer at the Standard, responded that it is "because they feed the rage. We bring the pain to the liberal media. I say that mockingly, but it's true somewhat. We come with a strong point of view and people like point-of-view journalism.

"While all these hand-wringing Freedom Forum types talk about objectivity, the conservative media [like] to rap the liberal media on the knuckles for not being objective. We've created this cottage industry in which it pays to be un-objective. It pays to be subjective as much as possible. It's a great way to have your cake and eat it too. Criticize other people for not being objective. Be as subjective as you want. It's a great little racket. I'm glad we found it, actually."

If Irving Kristol intended to start a revolution with his writing on the culture wars and US Cold War foreign policy, he certainly laid the groundwork in academic journals and periodicals. What may never have entered his imagination at the time was the degree of success the second generation of neo-conservatives would experience in marketing neo-conservative ideas to a mainstream audience. The original network of journals and think-tanks has been amplified by a powerful, streamlined media machine. The neo-conservative revolution has, quite literally, been televised.

Eli Clifton is a writer based in Washington, DC, and a contributor to Right Web.

Original article posted here.

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