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Notes -
The Iran War is beginning to alarm even the neocons
Robert Kagan has a new article in the Atlantic blasting Trump for the Iran War. This is somewhat significant. Kagan is an arch-neocon who supported every previous war in the Middle East. He was a major proponent of the Iraq War, acting as the media arm of the Israel Lobby. The neocons of the 00s were the mostly-Jewish “decisive voices promoting regime change in Iraq”, a pointless war that cost 3 trillion dollars, 35,000 American casualties including 4,500 dead, 200,000 direct civilian deaths by violence, and 1,000,000 excess civilian deaths in total, while indirectly leading ISIS to form among the disenfranchised and dispossessed former Ba’athist commanders (what did you think regime change consisted of?), a lapse in judgment which would cause the refugee crisis in Europe (with all the consequent rape and mayhem), the decimation of Iraqi and Syrian Christian communities, and myriad other human tragedies. It is important, I think, to continually remember how retarded that was; it is so recent, yet never sufficiently referenced in its full scope. (“Another Iraq”, yeah, but do you remember precisely how dumb that was?). Kagan’s criticism of the Iran War is interesting also because it retroactively informs us about the thinking behind the necon’s push for Iraq, given his prominence in that elite circle.
Funnily enough, one of Kagan’s last predictions just came true: Italy joined Spain in closing down its airspace this morning.
Along with the confirmation bias inducing admissions of what was really going on with regards to US policy and involvement in the middle east and how ideologically Zionist it has always been, the piece is very interesting. One can imagine that the Foreign Affairs Policy Board meetings have been getting heated for Kagan to want to publish this.
But taking the article at face value, Kagan seems to be wanting to have things both ways when he says:
Well, how is it America First then? I understand the label insofar as it can represent the 'populist strongman' stereotype of an authoritarian coming in like a wrecking ball to 'make things right' by cutting through all the nonsense and getting things done, or whatever. But why would such an 'America First' person feel the need to consult only with Israel at the cost of everything else? Throughout decades of foreign occupations, countless lives lost and trillions down the drain, the common denominator has not been 'America First' but Zionism.
The stalwarts of neo-conservatism might imagine that their interventions were prim and proper, but it's precisely those interventions and the negative fallout that has burnt through all the necessary political power around themselves and their allies so that they can continue on enacting and supporting this type of 'US' foreign policy.
To put a lighthearted spin on it, imagine a trolley problem. The trolley has already driven through millions of innocents. Cutting them to bits and causing excruciating torturous deaths, and it's about to drive over another undetermined amount of innocents. Kagan is here to tell us that the real problem is not the mass murder of innocents in service of US's ideological commitment to Zionism, but the authoritarianism and vulgarity by which the current operator is handling the lever. At no point do we consider directing the trolley somewhere else.
As someone who has made a conscious effort to maintain some a presence on both sides of a wide cultural gulf I don't think I've seen any event since Covid that made the different algorithmic/media bubbles that people exist in more apparent than current conflict with Iran.
If you exist in a liberal oriented media bubble that includes publications like The Atlantic everyone in your feed is talking about how this came out of nowhere, how there is no plan, how Trump has betrayed MAGA principles for Zionist interests and as a result the GOP is surely going to get creamed in the mid-terms.
If you exist in a more conservative or internationalist oriented media bubble everyone in your feed is talking about how striking Venezuela and Iran props up the petro-dollar and deprives rivals like China of cheap fuel.
From a Bayesian perspective, there is strong evidence that Trump really likes Jews and is not a great long term thinker. Hegseth's record does not inspire confidence either.
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