By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, June 25, 2025
After a short and successful war with Iraq, President
George H.W. Bush claimed in 1991 that “the ghosts of Vietnam have been laid to
rest beneath the sands of the Arabian desert.” Bush was referring to what was
commonly called “Vietnam
syndrome.” The idea was
that the Vietnam War had so scarred the American psyche that we forever lost
confidence in American power.
The elder president Bush was partially right. The first
Iraq war was certainly popular. And his successor, Bill Clinton, used American
power—in the former Yugoslavia and elsewhere—with the general approval of the
media and the public.
But when the younger Bush, Clinton’s successor, launched
wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the Vietnam syndrome came back with a vengeance.
Barely three weeks after the U.S. attacked Afghanistan on October 7, 2002,
famed New York Times correspondent R.W. Apple penned a piece headlined
“A Military Quagmire Remembered: Afghanistan as Vietnam.”
“Like an unwelcome specter from an unhappy past,” Apple
wrote, “the ominous word ‘quagmire’ has begun to haunt conversations among
government officials and students of foreign policy, both here and abroad.”
“Could Afghanistan become another Vietnam?” he
rhetorically asked. “Echoes of Vietnam are unavoidable,” he asserted.
Over the next 12 months, the newspaper ran nearly 300
articles with the words “Vietnam” and “Afghanistan” in them. The New York
Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune and Los Angeles
Times ran articles mentioning Iraq and Vietnam at an average rate of more
than twice a day (I looked it up
20 years ago).
The tragic irony is that President George W. Bush did
what his father couldn’t: He exorcized the specter of “another Vietnam”—but he
also replaced it with the specter of “another Iraq.”
That’s what’s echoing in the reaction to President Trump’s decision to attack Iran’s
nuclear facilities. We’re all familiar with cliches about generals fighting the
last war, but journalists and politicians have the same habit of cramming the
square peg of current events into the round hole of previous conflicts.
Trump’s decision to bomb Iran—which I broadly support,
with caveats— is fair game for criticism and concern. But the Iraq syndrome
cosplay misleads more than instructs. For starters, no one is proposing “boots
on the ground,” never mind “occupation” or “nation-building.”
The debate over whether George W. Bush lied us into war
over the issue of weapons of mass destruction is more tendentious than the
conventional wisdom on the left and right would have you believe. But it’s also
irrelevant. No serious observer disputes that Iran has been pursuing a nuclear
weapon for decades. The only live question is, or was, How close is Iran to
having one?
Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence,
told Congress in March—preposterously, in my opinion—that “Iran is not building
a nuclear weapon.” On Sunday, Meet the Press host Kristen Welker asked
Vice President J.D. Vance, “So, why launch this strike now? Has the
intelligence changed, Mr. Vice President?”
It’s a good question. But it’s not a sound basis for
insinuating that another Republican president is again using faulty
intelligence to get us into a war—just like Iraq.
The squabbling over whether this was a “preemptive”
rather than “preventative” attack misses the point. America would be justified
in attacking Iran even if Gabbard was right. Why? Because Iran has been
committing acts of war against America—and Israel—for decades, mostly through
terrorist proxies it created, trained, funded and directed for that purpose. In
1983, Hezbollah blew up the U.S. Embassy in Lebanon, killing 63. Later that
year, it blew up the U.S. Marine barracks in Beirut, killing 241 Americans. In
the decades since, Hezbollah and other Iranian proxies have orchestrated or
attempted the murder of Americans repeatedly,
including during the Iraq war. It even authorized the assassination of
President Trump, according to Joe
Biden’s Justice Department.
These are acts of war that would justify a response even
if Iran had no interest in a nuclear weapon. But the fanatical regime—whose
supporters routinely chant “Death to America!”—is pursuing a nuclear
weapon.
For years, the argument for not taking out that program
has rested largely on the fact that it would be too difficult. The facilities
are too hardened, Iran’s proxies are too powerful.
That is the intelligence that has changed. Israel crushed
Hezbollah and Hamas and eliminated much of Iran’s air defense system. What once
seemed like a daunting assault on a Death Star now seemed like a layup by
comparison.
None of this means that things cannot get worse or that
Trump’s decision won’t end up being regrettable. But whatever that scenario
looks like, it won’t look much like what happened in Iraq, except for those
unwilling to see it any other way.
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