Triumph of the Will
David Weigel | July 10, 2006, 2:43pm
Matthew Yglesias wins the coveted Metaphor-of-the-Day Award with this compare-and-contrast of last-throes neoconservative philosophy and the powers of Hal Jordan.
As you may know, the Green Lantern Corps is a sort of interstellar peacekeeping force set up by the Guardians of Oa to maintain the peace and defend justice. It recruits members from all sorts of different species and equips them with the most powerful weapon in the universe, the power ring.
The ring is a bit goofy. Basically, it lets its bearer generate streams of green energy that can take on all kinds of shapes. The important point is that, when fully charged what the ring can do is limited only by the stipulation that it create green stuff and by the user's combination of will and imagination.
...
Suffice it to say that I think all this makes an okay premise for a comic book. But a lot of people seem to think that American military might is like one of these power rings. They seem to think that, roughly speaking, we can accomplish absolutely anything in the world through the application of sufficient military force. The only thing limiting us is a lack of willpower.
The source of Yglesias' ire is this Reuel Marc Gerecht essay, which is predictably nutbar. What's less predictable is the entry of a liberal pundit onto well-trod Reason turf. Nick Gillespie used superheroes to discuss culture and plenitude in 2003; two weeks back, Jesse Walker unpacked his many thoughts on Superman in America and in his new blockbuster movie.
Grant Gould | July 10, 2006, 4:43pm | #
Papaya --
Where to start? How about the bit where he takes it for granted that bombing will work? All other options he puts to the test of, "what will happen if this option fails?" Gerecht catalogues how each diplomatic and political option might fail to alter the status quo.
Bombing gets no such analysis; it is presumed to succeed. What? You or I or anyone with even a pathetic American high-school knowledge of chemistry and physics could set up a uranium enrichment lab in the basement without anyone being the wiser (these are not, after all, nuclear reactors that we are talking about, breathless comparisons to Osirak aside), but we are to assume that Iran's enrichment program is in huge well-marked targets susceptible to airstrikes?
In fact of all the options bombing is the one whose failure would be worst by far. Given the demonstrable tendency of the government to fail at what it attempts, in matters military as much as civilian, it seems an odd sort of benefit of the doubt.
And how about that Osirak parallel? I can't help but notice that (1) The Osirak bombing was the last of a series of attempts, covert, diplomatic, and political, to stop the reactor; (2) It basically didn't work -- Iraq moved its program to more dispersed sites, and switched its emphasis to chemical weapons; and (3) It was a single target, too large and air-breathing to be effectively hidden or buried, full of delicate and irreplaceable equipment.
Finally, the diplomatic consequences of wiping out an Iranian nuclear program would be profound. The US has happily allowed more than a dozen countries to interpret the treaty as allowing development up to "a screwdriver's-turn away" from a bomb. When the US wipes out such a program, you can expect most or all of those countries to withdraw from the treaty (as the treaty specifically allows!) and go nuclear in a month. The US cannot deal with Iran as if nobody else is watching.
I'm as vexed by the Iran question as anyone. But Osirak-envy is just not a believable answer here.