By Victor Davis Hanson
Tuesday, January 13, 2015
For a number of years into the Cold War, American
presidents were occasionally troubled by the paradox that a democratic United
States was supporting right-wing anti-Communist dictatorships abroad. Either
Harry Truman, John Kennedy, or Lyndon Johnson — or all of them — was supposed
to have scoffed, in response to objections, something like the following, “He
may be a bastard, but at least he’s our bastard.”
That realist cynicism has more or less remained the same.
But now the ideology has flipped. Currently, the more that authoritarian thugs
abroad position themselves as anti-American, the more that we seem to glamorize
them. The new presidential sarcasm is, in effect, “He may be a bastard, but at
least he’s an anti-American bastard.”
One of the most peculiar pathologies of Western elites is
carrying on this apparent romance with non-Westerners who dislike the West,
while spurning those who admire it. The feminist pro-Western critic of Islam,
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, was recently disinvited from speaking at Brandeis University.
Earlier, Columbia University had welcomed the Iranian president, Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad, an unhinged anti-Jewish and anti-American theocrat. Apparently
hating America made Ahmadinejad the more interesting speaker; liking America
made Hirsi Ali suspect and certainly less romantically revolutionary. How odd
that for campus communities, being the victim of forced genital mutilation
makes one less sympathetic than a man who had ordered the deaths of female
supposed adulteresses.
In the spring of 2009, Iranians said to be numbering a
million demonstrated against the illiberal theocracy in their country. Yet
President Obama largely ignored the protesters, who were demanding free and
fair elections. Dealing with the messy Green Revolution advocates of democracy
apparently wasn’t as inviting an opportunity for Obama to showcase his
multicultural diplomatic dexterity as would have been dealing with the
previously recalcitrant Khomeinists. When Obama has gone out his way to reach
out to autocratic theocrats, he seems to have believed that their
anti-Americanism must be proof of the true aspirations of the Iranian people.
After the September 2012 attacks on the American
consulate in Benghazi, President Obama, along with many in his administration,
falsely blamed the killing of Americans on a right-wing Egyptian video-maker
residing on American soil. Neither Obama nor high-ranking members of his
administration mentioned the real culprits: an al-Qaeda affiliate that had
pre-planned the terrorist attacks to glorify the 9/11 anniversary. Obama
himself went on to declare, “The future must not belong to those who slander
the Prophet Mohammed.”
That self-serving proclamation was an especially
regrettable thing for the President of the United States to say, for a variety
of reasons. Obama knew from intelligence briefings that the video-maker Nakoula
Nakoula was not the catalyst for the attack. More importantly, Nakoula, quite
unlike the radical Islamist killers, did not manifest his anger at his enemies
through multiple murders.
Nonetheless, a federal judge conveniently jailed Nakoula
on a trumped-up parole violation. Stories circulated that the administration
wished to ban the video from the Internet. Whether intentionally or not, Obama
had sent the message that the critical — but non-violent — expression from Mr.
Nakoula was somehow suspect and counterfeit. In contrast, the administration’s
comparatively lackadaisical approach to finding and punishing the killers who
had stormed the U.S. consulate seemed to suggest that grassroots violent
Islamic outrage, while regrettable, nonetheless was not a particularly serious
problem.
On New Year’s Day, President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of
Egypt gave an astounding lecture on the crisis in the contemporary Middle East.
He called on Muslim imams to lead a “religious revolution” to stop the
murderous spread of radical Islam. Sisi’s sermon drew little attention in the
Western liberal press. Yet by any fair standard his was the most genuinely
liberal critique of Islamic fundamentalism in a generation. It was almost as if
the more Sisi echoed global concerns about Islamic radicalism, the more the
Western elites considered him suspect. Certainly, Obama ignored Sisi’s warning
— not so surprising, perhaps, since its enlightened message was antithetical to
the president’s own 2009 Cairo proclamation, when he invited members of the
illiberal Muslim Brotherhood to hear him invent all sorts of Islamic historical
achievements in a lame effort to win over radical Muslims. Sisi warns Muslims
of the lethality of radical Islam and counsels them about their own
responsibility to stop it; Obama in the same city cited the Cold War,
colonialism, and Western-led globalization as causes of understandable Islamic
extremism.
Not long ago the Obama administration took the first
steps toward normalizing relations with the Castro regime in Cuba. But while
Obama waxed eloquent about the supposed silliness of ostracizing the Communist
regime, he said comparatively little about the brutal imprisonment and torture
of thousands of Cubans. It was almost as if the more Cuba has emphasized its
anti-Americanism, the more the administration considers it an authentic pique.
The murderous thug Che Guevara is still iconic on college
campuses, more than 40 years after his death; the names of democratic
dissidents rotting in Cuban prisons are unknown. Apparently the romance of Che
dovetails with popular academic anti-Western narratives. In these circles, the
jailed enemies of Castro do nothing to refute the suppositions that put Che’s
face on college-dorm walls.
What is going on?
Too many Western journalists, academics, and politicians
focus exclusively on the sins of the West, whether out of a sincere belief that
Western civilization is toxic, or for a variety of largely self-serving
careerist or psychological reasons. The result is that many of our elites have
a natural sympathy for those abroad who share their own suspicions about the
U.S. — even if that means they must turn a blind eye on these anti-Western
regimes’ thoroughly illiberal treatment of women, gays, and religious and
ethnic minorities. In contrast, those abroad who seek to emulate Western
tolerance are looked upon as somehow illegitimate or inauthentic — or at least
ignorant about what is so wrong about Western civilization. Glorifying
anti-Western bastards abroad seem to reinforce anti-Western critics at home.
This Western neurosis has real-life consequences.
Reformers abroad are discouraged, feeling that they will be considered suspect.
But abhorrent authoritarians sense that they will at least win acknowledgment
that they represent widespread and understandable resistance to the West. The
Iranian theocracy does not believe that it is repugnant to elite Westerners;
Iranian democrats who believe in Western ideas of freedom probably feel that
they are deemed obstacles to “normalizing relations” with Tehran. When jihad is
a “holy struggle,” the Muslim Brotherhood is largely “secular,” and Islamist
terrorism is merely “violent extremism” and “man-caused disasters,” radical
Islamists nod that the U.S. seeks to contextualize their violence in a way that
it most surely does not, for example, in the case of the defensive measures
undertaken by democratic Israel.
Who in the Middle East wants to reach out to America when
his motives will be questioned by the very civilization he admires? Does the
U.S. reach out to Tunisia in the manner in which it courted the autocratic
Recep Erdogan’s increasing Islamist Turkey? If non-Westerners without the
affluence and security of the West pine for a chance at our values, what does
that say about rich, safe, and smug Westerners who pooh-pooh their admiration?
There is an inherent condescension — and hypocrisy — in
glorifying bastards. Violent and anti-American figures abroad like Yasser
Arafat, Fidel Castro, Hugo Chávez, and Che Guevara always earned a pat on the
head as noble savages — but only as long as their murderous tendencies were
kept at a safe distance. The truth is that our elites would rather send their children
in a junior-year-abroad program to an Egypt under President Sisi than under
Mohamed Morsi’s Muslim Brotherhood. For all his sermons to Israel and his
defense of the Palestinians, Secretary John Kerry would probably not wish to
vacation for a month on the West Bank in preference to Tel Aviv or Haifa.
The most lonely occupation in the world right now is that
of the genuine reformer who is trapped under autocracy, risking his life to
damn the madness in his midst, while being ignored by the West that he so
genuinely admires.
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