POLITICS-US: Bush's Book List Gets More Islamophobic
By Analysis by Jim Lobe
WASHINGTON, Mar 16 (IPS) - Accounts of a Feb. 28 "literary luncheon" at
the White House suggest that President George W. Bush's reading tastes -
until now a remarkably good predictor of his policy views - are moving
ever rightward, even apocalyptic, despite his administration's recent
suggestions that it is more disposed to engage Washington's foes, even in
the Middle East.
The luncheon, attended as well by Vice President Dick Cheney and a dozen
hard-line neo-conservatives, was held in honour of visiting British
historian Andrew Roberts whose latest work, "A History of the
English-Speaking Peoples Since 1900", Bush reportedly read late last year
and subsequently sent to Prime Minister Tony Blair. Cheney took the book
with him on his recent trip to Pakistan.
Roberts, an avowed Thatcherite who proudly declared himself "extremely
right-wing" in a recent Financial Times interview, repeatedly advised the
president, according to Irwin Stelzer, one of the neo-conservative
attendees, to ignore rising anti-U.S. sentiment abroad and opposition at
home in pursuing his war on terrorism - or what the historian has called
"the Manichean world-historical struggle" against fascism, of which
"Totalitarian Islamic Terrorist Fascism" is only the latest.
A major lesson of history, Roberts told Bush, is that "will trumps
wealth," according to Stelzer's account of the meeting in the Weekly
Standard. He warned that "the steady drumbeat of media pessimism and
television coverage are sapping the West's will" to fight and defeat the
enemy which, in his view, includes Iran, as well as Sunni radicals, such
as al Qaeda.
History also warned, Roberts reportedly said, against withdrawing U.S.
troops from Iraq according to a pre-set deadline, such as that currently
being debated in Congress. He compared the risks of doing so to the
slaughter of 700,000 to one million people that followed India's
independence from British rule in 1947.
In his article, Stelzer, an economist at the Hudson Institute and London
Sunday Times columnist, disclosed that Bush had also recommended that his
staff and friends read another, even more apocalyptic, analysis of the
current war on terror, "America Alone: The End of the World As We Know
It", by Toronto-born neo-conservative columnist Mark Steyn.
Steyn's book, which, unlike Roberts', actually made the New York Times
bestseller list, sees Europe's demographic trends and its multicultural,
"post-nationalist" secularism - of which his native Canada is also
guilty - as leading inevitably to the "Eupocalypse", the "recolonisation
of Europe by Islam", the emergence of "Eurabia", and the onset of a "new
Dark Ages" in which the United States will find it difficult to survive as
the "lonely candle of liberty."
Steyn, who admits that he would have to drive three hours from his home in
thankfully "undiverse" New Hampshire to find a Muslim, sees Islam
itself - and not just "Islamist radicals" or "jihadis", such as al
Qaeda - as a unique threat that cannot be reconciled with "free
societies".
"[I]t's not merely that there's a global jihad lurking within this
religion, but that the religion itself is a political project - and, in
fact, an imperial project - in a way that modern Christianity, Judaism,
Hinduism, and Buddhism are not," he writes. "Furthermore, this particular
religion is historically a somewhat bloodthirsty faith in which whatever's
your bag violence-wise can almost certainly be justified."
To deal with the threat, he calls for a familiar recipe of favourite
neo-conservative policies, from "support women's rights in the Muslim
world" and "wage ideological war", to "end the Iranian regime" and "strike
militarily when the opportunity presents itself."
The two books, whose worldview and policy prescriptions are remarkably
convergent, are the latest in a series read by Bush (not otherwise known
as a bibliophile) and lavishly promoted by neo-conservatives and their
major media outlets. These include the Wall Street Journal's editorial
page and various publications owned by Rupert Murdoch, Conrad Black
(before his current legal troubles), and Canada's Asper family, all of
which share a deep affinity for Israel's right-wing Likud Party, a strong
belief in the moral superiority of the so-called "Anglosphere" - Britain,
Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and the U.S. (although Steyn thinks
Britain and Canada may already be lost to the forces of darkness) - and
an undeniable nostalgia for the British Empire, particularly Winston
Churchill.
In the summer of 2002, for example, Bush was seen carrying a
just-published copy of "Supreme Command" by neo-conservative military
historian (and recently appointed State Department counselor) Eliot Cohen.
The book argued that the greatest civilian wartime leaders, notably
Abraham Lincoln and Churchill, had a far better strategic sense than their
generals - a particularly timely message in the months that preceded the
Iraq war when a surprising number of recently retired military brass here
were voicing strong reservations about the impending invasion.
Two years later, Bush was given an early copy of right-wing Israeli
politician Natan Sharansky's "The Case for Democracy: The Power of Freedom
to Overcome Tyranny and Terror", which argued that peace in the Middle
East could only emerge after the region's dictatorial regimes were
replaced by western-style democracies. Bush was so taken with it that he
summoned Sharansky for a White House tete-a-tete, made the book required
reading for his senior foreign policy aides, and incorporated its ideas -
in some cases, word for word - into his 2005 inaugural address.
During the Christmas holiday later that year, Bush read Robert Kaplan's
just-released "Imperial Grunts: The American Military on the Ground", an
unapologetic paean to U.S. soldiers (who, like Bush's self-image, "hunted,
drove pickups, employed profanities as a matter of dialect and yet had a
literal, demonstrable belief in the Almighty") deployed across the Muslim
world, from the southern Philippines to Mauritania, in what he called a
contemporary planetary version of "Injun Country"; that is, those parts of
the 19th century United States subdued and "civilised" thanks to the U.S.
Army.
Like the British a century before, it was Washington's "righteous
responsibility to advance the boundaries of free society and good
government into zones of sheer chaos," argued Kaplan, who, like Roberts
one year later, also warned at the time that an early U.S. withdrawal from
Iraq would result in a "real bloodbath".
What is remarkable about all of these books is - much like the
cherry-picked and manipulated intelligence stovepiped to Bush in the
run-up to the Iraq War - both their extraordinary ideological narrowness
and their utility in the pursuit of a neo-conservative agenda, especially
in the Middle East.
In one way or another, each affirms core neo-conservative ideas: the
essential beneficence of U.S. (and Anglospheric) power even if the
"natives" are ungrateful; the supreme importance of both "will" and
military might in wielding that power, particularly against enemies that
can never be "appeased" or "contained" and that, in Roberts' words, are
motivated not so much by legitimate grievances against U.S. policies, as
by "loathing of the English-speaking people's traditions of democratic
pluralism"; the evils of "liberalism", "secularism" and "moral relativism"
of western societies that undermine their will to fight; and the
catastrophic consequences of retreat or defeat.
All of these also play to Bush's own Manicheanism and self-image as a
courageous, often lonely, leader in the mold of a Lincoln or Churchill,
determined to pursue what he believes is right regardless of what "old
Europe", "intellectuals", "elites", or even the electorate thinks about
his course and confident only in the conviction that History or God will
vindicate him.
It's an image that Bush's neo-conservative guests - including the Wall
Street Journal's editorial page editor, Paul Gigot; former Commentary
editor Norman Podhoretz, New York Sun editor Seth Lipsky, and several
like-minded columnists - themselves have also tried hard to propagate,
particularly as public confidence in Bush has fallen to the longest
sustained lows for any president in more than 50 years.
"It is fair to say that the few people I spoke with as we left shared my
impression," wrote the Standard's Stelzer. "Here is a man comfortable in
his own skin; whose religious faith guides him in his search for the
good... who worries less about his 'legacy' than about his standing with
the Almighty, (and) who is quite well read..."
(FIN/2007)
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