Crown wrote:First, I'll reply to this in the general sense; yep, I agree there were some legitimate cockups back in the day leading to the Iraq war. No doubt, there were some learned people who were perhaps a little more ignorant than savant on this matter, and sure they made some unfortunate decisions, point taken.
Hell this board was around back then, you can sort the N&P Forum by going to the last page and having a read of the tragic comedy unfolding for yourself. Perfectly preserved for ever on the interwebs. Hell if real people hadn't actually died it would even be funny! \o/
But real people actually did die because of this fucking idiocy, and while I can excuse the voiceless plebs on the forums for their moronic idiocy, Hitchens was a rather loud, obnoxious, apologetic, cheerleader of the whole scam from start to finish.
Yes. I don't fault the people who thought that there was a genuine war for Western civilization going on, and that fighting in Iraq to democratize the place would be a big victory...
in 2003. I'll even give them a pass up to around '05, maybe '06 if I'm feeling generous.
The longer it took them to wake up and smell the coffee, the more respect I lose for them, modulated by how easy it was to expect them to learn the lesson at all. Sixty year old men are often bad at learning lessons; I don't think that this invalidates an entire career in one stroke. I could go on about that at length, about how easy it is to outlive your reputation and disgrace yourself in old age, but maybe I'd better not.
Multiple strokes, many cases of acting in poor taste or backing the wrong cause, yes, at some point it erases any respect I may have for someone as an intellectual. But in Hitchens' case, I extend a little more understanding because I understand the chain of logic that led him over the cliff- I was part way down it myself for a few years in 2004-05, and it was mostly the sliminess of watching it come from Dick Cheney that made me stop and reconsider.
Hitchens, well before 9/11 or the invasion of Iraq, bought into the idea of radical Islam as the next existential crisis for Western civilization. This idea should not be foreign to anyone on this forum who is deeply anti-religious. It's not as if we don't talk about radical Christians as a threat to modernity- despite the relative dearth of Christian suicide bombers. It was that idea that radical Islam was The Enemy and must be neutralized by tiling the Middle East with secular democracies that drove Hitchens' support for the Iraq War.
We can see analogies in the people who thought communism had to be contained and rolled back, or who thought fascism had to be contained and rolled back. If you think there is a great clash of ideals and all that you value in your culture will be destroyed if you lose, you start getting desperate and calling for extremely bloody deeds. It's a predictable pattern, and history is often harsh to those who fall into it, but it's so natural for intellectuals who love something about their own society that I have a hard time deliberately insulting them for it.
I'm not sure I'd be happier with the alternative, which would be intellectuals who
have no instinct to rally to the defense of their society when they see it in danger.