Yesterday, I posted Part 1 of this excerpt from Chapter 9 of The Reactionary Mind. Today, I post Part 2. • • • • • What is it about being a great power that renders the imagining of its own demise so potent? Why, despite all the strictures about the prudent and rational use of force, are those powers so quick to resort to it? Perhaps it is because there is something deeply appealing about the idea of disaster, about manfully confronting and mastering catastrophe. For disaster and catastrophe can summon a nation, at least in theory, to plumb its deepest moral and political reserves, to have its mettle tested, on and off the battlefield. However much leaders and […]
-
Categories
Foreign Policy, Political Theory
-
Tags Abu Ghraib, Admiral Mayorga, Alan Dershowitz, Daniel Pearl, David Brooks, Donald Rumsfeld, Geoffrey Miller, Henry Kissinger, Henry Shue, Isaiah Berlin, Jean Bethke Elshtain, Laurence Olivier, Liza Minnelli, Machiavelli, Mama Rose, Marathon Man, Mussolini, Rebecca, Richard Perle, Sanford Levinson, Seymour Hersh, Taguba Report, Thomas Carlyle, Yitzhak Shamir
As part of my ongoing series of short takes from The Reactionary Mind, I excerpt here chapter 9, “Protocols of Machismo.” This chapter originally appeared as a review essay in the London Review of Books in 2005. Because that piece remains behind the firewall, I’ve decided to reproduce the chapter here in its entirety: Part 1 today, Part 2, I hope, tomorrow. In the last several months, I’ve spent much time defending the state against both libertarians and anarchists. In this chapter, however, I go after the state and one of its most powerful and primary fetishes: the doctrine of national security. I also expand beyond my analysis of conservative intellectuals, taking on prominent liberal theorists like Michael Walzer and, […]
-
Categories
Foreign Policy, The Left, The Right
-
Tags Abu Ghraib, Brent Scowcroft, Cardinal Richelieu, Daniel Bell, Diane Sawyer, Edmund Burke, Francis Bacon, George Bush, Hitler, John Mearsheimer, Joseph Nye, Learned Hand, Michael Walzer, Peter Trubowitz, Richard Perle, Sanford Levinson, Stalin, Stephen Walt, Winston Churchill, Zbigniew Brzezinski