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New Commentary
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December 26, 2006
Why Radical Islam And Why Now?
by Victor Davis Hanson
Tribune Media Services
Advertisement
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Read any newspaper or turn on any news broadcast and you're bound to encounter stories of Islamic radicals fighting, killing and threatening each other and just about everyone else.
In Somalia, jihadists, with the support of al Qaeda, have clashed with troops loyal to the country's internationally recognized interim government and now threaten neighboring Ethiopia with all-out war.
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December 24, 2006
A Symphony Unheard
Go see The Nativity Story.
by Craig Bernthal
Private Papers
Here is the plot and the theme: God creates the universe, not because he needs to, since he is complete in himself, but as an act of gratuitous love.
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December 23, 2006
Whose Fiasco?
by Victor Davis Hanson
Policy Review
A review of Fiasco: The American Adventure in Iraq by Thomas E. Ricks (Penguin Press, 2006, pp. 496)
Thomas Ricks, the distinguished Pulitzer-prize-winning former Wall Street Journal and current Washington Post journalist, has published widely on defense issues, winning the respect of many, both inside the Pentagon and while on deployment abroad, for his disinterested narratives.
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Lest We Forget
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Editor's Note:
Two-and-a-half years ago, in May 2004, VDH warned that all the squabbling over Iraq could be put to rest should the United States take the initiative and defeat the insurrectionists, the premise being that most have no ideology, but most certainly do not want to be associated with a losing enterprise. Then he was worried that the withdrawal from the first attack of Fallujah and the escape of Sadr sent a terrible message that the United States was not winning, and that such magnanimity would be unfortunately considered weakness, leading only to more violence.
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May 28, 2004
Our Reptilian Brains
When “Just Win, Baby” sadly trumps everything else.
by Victor Davis Hanson
National Review Online
After our victory in Afghanistan, the president's approval ratings soared, only to descend during the acrimony leading up to the March invasion of Iraq. But after the three-week war, somewhere between 60 and 70 percent of these same Americans purportedly returned to their earlier support of the president's initiatives.
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Books & Things
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November 23, 2006
Who Were We?
by Victor Davis Hanson
National Review Magazine
A slightly shorter version of this review of Dangerous Nation by Robert Kagan and The American Way of Strategy by Michael Lind appeared in the October 22 issue of the National Review Magazine.
President Bush and his neoconservative advisers, along with his compliant top brass, are pilloried as hegemonists and imperialists, spending vast amounts of blood and treasure in a vain effort to ram our brand of democracy down the collective throat of the Muslim Middle East.
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November 8, 2006
The New Appeasement
by Victor Davis Hanson
The New Criterion
A review of Mark Steyn’s America Alone: The End of the World as We Know It. (Regnery, 2006, 256 pp.)
The wider English-reading public discovered the genius of Mark Steyn after September 11, and for two reasons other than the fact that his amazing prolificacy did not come at the expense of quality.
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Pajama's Media Blog
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December 10, 2006
The Autumn of Our Discontent
The War at Home.
The pundits and politicians on the East Coast have really lost it, declaring the war in Iraq now over and losteven as 140,000 American soldiers are not only still in the field, but fighting in the belief that they can and will win, and that such a victory leading to a stable government in Iraq will enrich millions in the region and make us safer at home.
December 7, 2006
Almost Everything Today
Day of Infamy
Sixty-five years ago today we were attacked at Pearl Harbor. I wrote today in my weekly Tribune Media Services column, why, unlike our forefathers, we haven’t been able to finish the war within four years following that similar preemptory and surprise attack on American soil.
December 2, 2006
War and More
Too much about Iraq?
Some readers will complain about reading here more on Iraq, and the need to defeat the Islamists in the more general war against terror. But the serial writing about the topic is like yelling “Fire” as flames engulf the house. Do we yell it only once, and then keep mum in fears of boring the scorched inhabitants?
November 29, 2006
Wars, Then and Now...
Selective Morality
When George Bush Sr. addressed an audience in Abu Dhabi, he was jeered and blamed for globalization this from a country that can only exist with foreign expertise in a globalized world that finds, extracts, and sells its accidental petroleum fortune. What exactly have the subjects of the Gulf monarchies achieved without foreign expertise or the armed forces of the United States that alone guarantee free and safe world commerce in and out of the Persian Gulf?
November 27, 2006
So Close, So Far
No, no, no….
The problems in Iraq, in the radical Middle East at large with democratization, with nuclearization, with Islamism are not, repeat not, a lack of dialogue with Syria and Iran.
November 20, 2006
Politics and War, Then and Now
Is it a Roar or a Meow?
Governance is not the same as easy criticism. Already the Democrats are learning, as is eternally true of our wonderful political system, that loud opposition is not the same as being responsible for governance.
November 17, 2006
They're Back?
All too real
I have been going through the recent report, “Iran: Time for a New Approach” co-chaired by Zbigniew Brzezinski (in charge at National Security during the Iranian hostage crisis of 1979) and Robert Gates (involved in Iran-Contra). It makes depressing reading in its call for new talks with the dictators in Iran, since we have done that for 20 years, and should have learned that they lip-synch back only when they feel they have more to gain than lose. Churchill understood that when he put an end to Tory backchannel efforts to talk with ascendant Nazis after the fall of France. And surely we should learn something from the recent Hamas step back and apparent willingness to rethink talking to Israel given its loss of millions in Western handouts and tough Israel retaliation against Gaza.
November 12, 2006
Rumsfeld, Webband Being Careful About What You Wish For
Vaya Con Dios, Rummy!
Here is the record of Donald Rumsfeld.
(1) Tried to take a top-heavy Pentagon and prepare it for the wars of the postmodern world, in which on a minute’s notice thousands of American soldiers, with air and sea support, would have to be sent to some god-awful place to fight some savagery and then be trashed live on CNN for doing it;
November 10, 2006
Euripides, the Reverend Haggard, Nemesis, and John Kerry
Our New Pentheus
Long before Sigmund Freud wrote about repression and the subconscious, Euripides the fifth-century B.C. Athenian playwright explored the frenzy of the human mind whether Medea’s homicidal rage, Hippolytus’ smug self-righteousness, or poor Pentheus of his masterpiece Bacchae.
November 1, 2006
War and Immigration
That Was Then, This is Now…
I have been reading various columnists today, going over the weekly angry mail about essays I wrote in support of our efforts in Iraq, and listening to Democratic candidates pontificate on the war.
October 31, 2006
War, Punditry, and Farming
Will the Center Hold?
Depression apparently abounds these days. In the latest Time, Robert Galluci, the present Dean of the School of Foreign Service at Georgetown University, pleads with ...
October 25, 2006
Middle East Madness
More Rubble, Less Trouble?
There is a new narrative compare the recent essay in the New York Times Magazine on the supposed resurgence of the Taliban in Afghanistan namely that the United States is failing not only in Iraq to win hearts and minds, but also in Afghanistan.
October 21, 2006
Darfurthe Good Iraq
Darfur
I am as outraged as the next American about the genocide in Darfur.
October 16, 2006
"Honor"?
Why do they hate us?
Here it is from the horses’ mouths: Afghanistan, Bosnia, Chechnya, East Timor, Iraq, Kosovo, Lebanon, the Philippines, Somalia, Saudi Arabia, and Spain (Andalusia).
October 13, 2006
Koreana
There are some things to remember about North Korea’s nuclear acquisition in the context of this wider war against Islamism.
October 9, 2006
From Foley to Footnotes
Holy Foley
North Korea may well have let off a 20-kiloton nuke. Last week Iran’s Ahmadinejad ridiculed efforts to corral his own nuclear ambitions.
October 4, 2006
The War and Its Critics
Pajamas Media
Pseudo-footnotes
Most genres don’t require footnotes the memoir, the essay, the journalistic dispatch.
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Angry Reader
Editor's Note: In this section we entertain letters from the critics. Some readers are angry, some are not so angry, and others merely frustrated. |
December 8, 2006
Mr. Hanson, have you ever written anything positive about Muslims or Islam, or is it always going to be Israel and the U.S. right, Islam always wrong?
Hanson: How odd to suggest that when the now demonized policy, which I supported, of staying on after the removal of Saddam Hussein to allow elections for the Iraqis was most certainly based on the utopian idea that Muslims themselves were quite capable of consensual government as we see in Turkey or Indonesia.
So it is up to Arab Muslims to prove that ideal was also true of the Arab Middle East, and show that Palestine and Iraq can stabilize and conduct democracy under the rule of law.
Another piece of advise to you, as a moderate Muslim in the West: the present U.S. policy was about as good as the Middle East was going to get, this engagement that saw billions spent in Afghanistan and Iraq for democracy, and real American pressure exerted on behalf on the people of Lebanon, Egypt, and the Gulf States to have a say in their governments.
So we are at a great crossroads: when the world's only superpower puts its money and lives behind the idea of consensual government for Arab Muslims, will they tweak and fidget about the infidel's hubris, or use the opening for their own purposes of reform?
And a word of warning as well: if Iraq should fail, and if there should be another 9/11 traced to a terrorist-sponsoring Arab nation, and celebrated once more by the proverbial Arab Street, then for the next half century the United States will write off all notion of reform and liberalization and just deal, as we see with the return of the realists, with the Middle East as it is. And that means tough, obliterating retaliatory strikes to each terrorist provocation, without much concern for illiberal conditions on the ground that so enhance the opportunistic terrorists. It is the Muslim world's call, not ours.
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