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How the Neocons
Misread Machiavelli
By Firmin DeBrabander
06/13/07 "ICH
" -- -- It is said that the now notorious
Neo-Cons owe much to that dark prince of political theory,
Machiavelli. Indeed, they invoked classic Machiavellian
arguments in lobbying for military operations in Afghanistan and
Iraq: we must bring the war to the terrorists' doorstep instead
of waiting for them to visit us; we must be martially aggressive
to reassert our power and economic independence; we must
reinforce the image, tarnished after 9-11, that we are a nation
not to be provoked. And yet, while the Neo-Cons now assert that
we must stubbornly remain in Iraq for many, many years to come,
Machiavelli would most certainly call the troops home. For, this
faltering campaign--coupled with the growing disaster in
Afghanistan--offends his principles gravely.
The president's last budget asked for $315 billion to support
the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan over the next two years, and
the Pentagon requested nearly $500 billion for the same
campaigns. Despite this gross expenditure, our forces are losing
ground to the Taliban, of all people--whom we supposedly
dispatched in 2002--and to disparate, competing paramilitary
groups in Iraq. To put it starkly, we expend over 3/4 of a
trillion dollars in combating sub-national, third world forces.
And struggle mightily against them. In point of fact, their
'Improvised Explosive Devices' devastate our technically
sophisticated soldiers. We have been bombarded for several
months now by the horrifying brain damage these 'Improvised'
weapons wreak. With each spike in military spending, our
humiliation grows.
Machiavelli would never stand for such humiliation. He was
obsessed with political reputation, famously advising
distasteful tactics for securing a good one. Above all, he
insisted, sovereigns must exude military might, to pacify
potential adversaries abroad and restless masses at home. What,
one should ask, is the present perception of our 'military
might' mired in Iraq and Afghanistan? Machiavelli would sputter
about how we are becoming a laughingstock. How is this present
military showing supposed to deter assaults on American
interests and inspire domestic pride and confidence? Future foes
are only encouraged and emboldened as we falter against far
inferior armies.
This state of affairs is not the fault of our troops, but of the
tacticians and sponsors of this war, rather. Why are we wasting
resources on a war in Afghanistan, for example, which this
administration either considers already lost, or has no
intention of winning. What else are we to conclude when the
Taliban is on the march, the heroin harvest reaches record
highs, and yet the president reduces our presence in
Afghanistan, transferring troops for the surge in Iraq? In this
case, not only are we toiling for naught in Afghanistan, but we
are actively constructing an image of incompetence. Those poor
troops remaining in Afghanistan must accept the indignity of
losing to the Taliban -- and barely hanging on in Kabul-- with
the whole world looking on.
In his typical cynicism, Machiavelli asserts that it is
perfectly natural and normal for princes to yearn for conquest,
and they are praiseworthy when they succeed in conquest, and
blameworthy when they fail. In other words, if you go to war,
make sure you win, for if you don't, you lose a lot more than
the war, but also your honor and security. Concretely, this
means that we must henceforth refrain from halfhearted efforts
in either of the present wars, and dedicate ourselves
wholeheartedly to one or the other. Or alternately, this means
that we must remove our soldiers, our contractors, our humvees,
our camps and fortresses--anything emblazoned with the American
flag--from the carnage in Iraq and Afghanistan that is televised
across the globe (especially on Al Jazeera), transmitting our
disgrace and weakness to any and all potential aggressors.
For, it is not so much hatred and anger that inspires enemies to
attack the prince, Machiavelli maintains, but the perception
that he is weak. In fact, such a perception multiplies the
prince's adversaries, for it emboldens those who are merely
greedy for power and attention. Simply put, the great offense of
the present wars is, ironically, that they undermine this
nation's dignity and fearsomeness--precisely what the Neo-Cons
purported to reclaim and defend in the first place.
Firmin DeBrabander is a Professor of Philosophy at the Maryland
Institute College of Art. Email: firmind@msn.com
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