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Senator Hillary Clinton and neoconservative
blogger Andrew Sullivan share more than a belief that “Jesus, Mohamed,
and Socrates are part of the same search for truth.” They’re both
Christians who won’t confess to their sins.
Both were enthusiastic supporters of Bush’s invasion of Iraq, turned
scathing and sanctimonious critics of the war. Neither has quite come
clean. Both ought to prostrate themselves before those they’ve
bamboozled, those they’ve helped indirectly kill, and whichever deity
they worship. (The Jesus-Mohamed-and-Socrates profanity, incidentally,
was imparted by Sullivan, during a remarkably rude interview he gave
Hugh Hewitt. The gay activist-cum-philosopher king was insolent; Hewitt took it .)
I won’t bore you with the hackneyed war hoaxes Sullivan once spewed,
only to say that there was not an occurrence he didn’t trace back
to Iraq: anthrax, September 11, and too few gays in the military—you
name it; Iraq was behind it. Without minimizing the role
of politicians like Clinton, who signed the marching orders, pundits
like Sullivan provided the intellectual edifice for the war, also
inspiring impressionable young men and women to sacrifice their lives
and limbs to the insatiable Iraq Moloch.
For her part, Clinton the turncoat has refused to atone
for her role in the prosecution of an unjust war. During the Democratic
presidential candidates’ debate in New Hampshire, she was asked whether
she regretted “voting to authorize the president’s use of force against
Saddam Hussein in Iraq without actually reading the national
intelligence estimate, the classified document laying out the best U.S.
intelligence at that time.” Her reply: “I feel like I was totally
briefed. [Expect the “I-feel-like” locution to proliferate if a woman is
ensconced in the White House.] I knew all the arguments. I knew all of
what the Defense Department, the CIA, the State Department were all
saying. And I sought dissenting opinions, as well as talking to people
in previous administrations and outside experts.”
Clinton is claiming to have possessed perfect
knowledge from which she managed somehow to derive less than perfect
conclusions, and for which she blames Bush! In
authorizing Bush to go to war, the knavish Clinton insists that she
believed (or rather “felt like”) the president would first let Dr.
Mohammed ElBaradei and his team of weapons inspectors search for WMD, a
task they were performing at the time of the invasion, and only then
invade Iraq. But Bush played a trick on her. He switched his strategy.
Instead of searching for WMD first and then invading, Bush invaded and
then searched for WMD. Poor Polly; she didn’t suspect the president had
demanded powers that were not constitutionally his—the power to commit
the country to war belongs to Congress—because he wanted to … go to war.
Here’s what’s really happening. Those who were 100 percent wrong on the
war want to, somehow, retain their credibility and pretend that those of
us who got it 100 percent right did so by coincidence. Not if I can help
it. Like the remarkable Rep. Ron Paul, opponents of
the invasion were right because we cleaved to the kind of
intellectual and moral principles that
were immutably true before Sept. 11, after it, and forever after.
Objective reality was a start: Iraq was an economically desperate,
secular dictatorship, utterly antagonistic to Islamic fundamentalism. At
the time of the invasion, it had acquiesced to inspectors, was being
criss-crossed by teams of them, hadn’t any ties to al-Qaida or a hand in
Sept. 11; was a Third-World nation, whose military prowess was a fifth
of what it was when hobbled during the Gulf War. It had no navy or air
force, and was no threat to American national security.
If objective reality proved problematic for the skittish
Sullivan, as a Catholic, he might have deferred to the traditions of
natural law and just war. If the natural prohibition against aggressive,
unprovoked wars also struck Sullivan as unintuitive, he ought to have
contemplated what the Founding Fathers provided. A limited,
constitutional republican government, by definition, can never pursue
the kind of 21st-century Manifest Destiny Bush was chasing. If it does,
it is destined to become limitless, unconstitutional, and dictatorial.
To be fair, Sullivan did bury in a Time Magazine column
an expression of “a real sense of shame and sorrow that so many have
died because of errors made by their superiors, and by writers like me.”
This alone makes him infinitely nobler than Clinton, for what that’s
worth. Both ought to credit their betters—pundits and a presidential
candidate—for not becoming mired in moral and intellectual confusion.
The Roman author Syrus said that “to confess a fault
freely is the next thing to being innocent of it.” Sullivan, Clinton—and the many other
former war proponents now posing as veteran
opponents of the invasion—have skipped what ought to have been a public
confession.
© 2007 By Ilana Mercer
WorldNetDaily.com
June 8
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