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Commonweal Institute: The Neocons Have No Credibility, So Why Do They Get So Much Media Exposure?

BUZZFLASH GUEST COMMENTARY
by Brad Reed of Commonweal Institute

If the media coverage of the Iranian elections has taught us anything, it's that the neoconservatives have held onto their megaphones in the mainstream press. For those of you unfamiliar with the neoconservatives - or neocons, as they are often referred to - they're a clique of right-wing foreign policy ideologues who think the use of American military power is always justified under any circumstances. The endgame, as neocon Max Boot put it, is to have American troops occupy the "troubled lands" that "cry out for the sort of enlightened foreign administration once provided by self-confident Englishmen in jodhpurs and pith helmets." The neocons' one real attempt at implementing this doctrine so far has been in Iraq, where our country has been fighting for more than six years to take out Saddam Hussein's non-existent weapons of mass destruction stockpiles.

Amazingly, the neocons have learned nothing from the bloody experience in Iraq and would like to see it copied several times over. The recent Iranian elections are a case in point, as the neocons used the crackdown on Iranian dissidents as an excuse to both portray President Obama as weak and to restate their calls for regime change in the country. And of course, it isn't merely Iran where the neocons would like to see military force applied. Neocon guru and Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol, for instance, has advocated using the American military to preventatively attack not only Iran, but also North Korea, Sudan and even Somali pirates. The neocons don't seem to understand that it is simply not possible to fight multiple wars at once with our already-overstretched military. When Newt Gingrich was asked on Meet the Press a few years ago if having 130,000 of our troops stuck in Iraq had harmed our ability to deal effectively with Iran and North Korea, Gingrich actually said that it only hurt us "in our minds."

But despite the fact that the neocons are demonstrably insane, they haven't lost any of their credibility in the world of mainstream punditry. Neocons Kristol, Robert Kagan and Charles Krauthammer are all regular columnists at the Washington Post, while Newt Gingrich and Liz Cheney have become fixtures on television talk shows. Why have the neoconservatives been given such a large megaphone in the press when other members of the conservative movement, such as the libertarians and Christian conservatives, get relatively little exposure?

I think one big reason has to be the simplicity of the neocons' narrative. While debates about healthcare reform and financial regulations are likely to go over many journalists' heads, everybody understands, say, getting blown up by a North Korean missile. And because the neocons seem to think their target audience does not have the deepest understanding of history, they keep their historical analogies stark and uncomplicated: Chamberlain's appeasement of Hitler, Jimmy Carter's handling of the Iranian hostage crisis and the terrorist attacks of September 11. These analogies are typically deployed in the following manner: "(X Politician) is showing the craven incompetence of Jimmy Carter while following Neville Chamberlain's plan of appeasement, thus placing the nation in grave danger of getting hit with another 9/11."

While these blatant scare tactics are good at garnering headlines, they are also easy to ridicule. After all, the reason why Adolf Hitler and the 9/11 attacks are so ingrained into our historical consciousness is because they were so uniquely awful. So when Charles Krauthammer claims that the leaders of China, North Korea and Iran are all the next Hitler, for example, the analogy loses a lot of its power. Similarly, when the Weekly Standard compares Barack Obama, Bill Clinton, every 2004 Democratic presidential candidate, Jimmy Carter, George HW Bush and the Iraq Study Group to Neville Chamberlain, you can't help but laugh. Because let's face it: if every other country is run by the next Hitler and four out of our last six presidents have been Neville Chamberlains, America should have been overrun by barbarian hordes long ago.

In this light, it seems that ridicule is probably the best weapon for progressives who want to defend the virtues of diplomacy and multilateralism against the neocons' ceaseless calls for more war. So the next time you find yourself debating a neoconservative who compares you to Neville Chamberlain because you don't want to invade Venezuela, just roll your eyes and say, as neocon hero Ronald Reagan once did, "There you go again."

Contributed to BuzzFlash by Commonweal Institute

BUZZFLASH GUEST COMMENTARY

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More to the point...

Not to dispute anything in Mr. Reed's piece, but there's a much shorter and more elementary answer to why conservatives - neo or otherwise - get more exposure in the media: they own it. No matter where you go on your TV or radio dial, the chances are 90% the outlet belongs to one of a half-dozen mega-corporations such as GE, Viacom, Time-Warner or (of course) News Corp, which are owned and controlled by obscenely wealthy conservatives.

And regularly giving the megaphone to the likes of Kristol and Gingrich is only half the modus operandi; the other is the routine marginalization of progressive voices. One of the smartest and most forward-thinking projects the right has ever undertaken was the massive acquisition of broadcast and print media that '80's deregulation made possible.

And these same mega-corps are currently - and relentlessly - working to gain control of the only truly free and unfettered means of mass communication extant: the internet.

Our equally relentless vigilance is key.

excellent point

the media has a corporate bias.

Remember Eisenhower's "military-industrial complex?"

Let's just look at the state of the U.S. military machine in late Twentieth and early Twenty-first centuries and just a cursory glance tells one that it has gone beyond merely providing for the common defense and has morphed into a major engine of the "free market" economy.

Since the deindustrialization of the country and the successful war on organized labor in the civilian, nongovernmental segment of the economy, good-paying jobs for young men and women, whether among those not inclined to go onto higher education after high school or too poor to do so, has withered almost into nonexistence, leaving the US military as a first, rather than last, choice of employment. And, paraphrasing Madeleine Albright's query to then Joint Chief General Colin Powell, what's the point of having a magnificent military if you never use it? After all, personnel is among the most fungible of military assets. The burden of empire rests on the backs of our Milton J. Friedmen invented All Volunteer Force, which increasingly is home to assorted Christian fundamentalists, white supremacists, homophobes and sex offenders. Of course after rigorous and expensive training on the US taxpayer's dollar, many of these same individuals find more lucrative employment in the burgeoning private security industry, think "Black Water," now known as "Xe," or in our civilian police forces.

The other thing about the military-industrial complex that goes unreported is that it is fairly stable investment and profitable stock. I am sure Messrs. Kristol, Krauthammer, Boot et al undoubtedly have fattened their stock portfolios with shares of defense contractor stock.

And for neocon Democrats the military-industrial complex is one of the last remaining bastions of organized labor. Without fat contracts to Boeing, Lockheed Martin, the United Auto Workers (UAW) and the International Association of Machinists and Aerospace Workers (IAMAW) could not cut fat donation checks to the Democratic US representatives and senators who look out after their own best interests. After all it takes a lot of IAMAW workers to build an F-22 Raptor.

So perpetual warfare is an integral part of the American economy. Fighting unwinnable wars will be part and parcel of American foreign policy until the country is bankrupted beyond all recognition.

So the reason neocon dopes Mr. Reed has mentioned above have such a hold on TeeVee is that their ultimate masters in the corporate boardrooms of the major media companies, i.e. Viacom, Disney, Fox and so on, are also major shareholders in all the major defense contractors and more than likely set on the boards of them. So while war may be unhealthy for children and other living things, it is very good for the profit margin.

ET Spoon