Very well done -
by
Dr. Srdja Trifkovic, Serbian-American writer and the director of the
Center for International Affairs at The Rockford Institute
August
6, 2012 (TSR) –
The neoconservatives are often depicted as former
Trotskyites who have morphed into a new, closely related life form. It
is pointed out that many early neocons — including The Public Interest
founder Irving Kristol and coeditor Nathan Glazer, Sidney Hook, and
Albert Wohlstetter — belonged to the anti-Stalinist far left in the late
1930s and early 1940s, and that their successors, including Joshua
Muravchik, and Carl Gershman, came to neoconservatism through the
Socialist Party at a time when it was Trotskyite in outlook and
politics.
[Ed: For graphic chart of Neoconservatism]
As early as 1963 Richard Hofstadter commented on the progression of many ex-Communists from the paranoid left to the paranoid right, clinging all the while to the fundamentally Manichean psychology that underlies both. Four decades later the dominant strain of neoconservatism is declared to be a mixture of geopolitical militarism and “inverted socialist internationalism.”
[Ed: For graphic chart of Neoconservatism]
As early as 1963 Richard Hofstadter commented on the progression of many ex-Communists from the paranoid left to the paranoid right, clinging all the while to the fundamentally Manichean psychology that underlies both. Four decades later the dominant strain of neoconservatism is declared to be a mixture of geopolitical militarism and “inverted socialist internationalism.”
Blanket
depictions of neoconservatives as redesigned Trotskyites need to be
corrected in favor of a more nuanced analysis. In several important
respects the neoconservative world outlook has diverged from the
Trotskyite one and acquired some striking similarities with Stalinism
and German National Socialism. Today’s neoconservatives share with
Stalin and Hitler an ideology of nationalist socialism and
internationalist imperialism.
The similarities deserve closer scrutiny and may contribute to a better understanding of the most influential group in the U.S. foreign policy-making community.
The similarities deserve closer scrutiny and may contribute to a better understanding of the most influential group in the U.S. foreign policy-making community.
Certain
important differences remain, notably the neoconservatives’ hostility
not only to Nazi race-theory but even to the most benign understanding
of national or ethnic coherence. On the surface, there are also glaring
differences in economics. However, the neoconservative glorification of
the free market is more rhetoric, designed to placate the businessmen
who fund them, than reality. In fact, the neoconservatives favor not
free enterprise but a kind of state capitalism — within the context of
the global apparatus of the World Bank and the IMF — that Hitler would
have appreciated.
Some
form of gradual but irreversible and desirable withering away of the
state is a key tenet of the Trotskyite theoretical outlook. The
neoconservatives, by contrast, are statists par excellence. Their core
belief — that society can be managed by the state in both its political
and economic life — is equally at odds with the traditional conservative
outlook and with the non-Stalinist Left. In this important respect the
neoconservatives are much closer to Stalinism and National Socialism.
They
do not want to abolish the state; they want to control it — especially
if the state they control is capable of controlling all others. They are
not “patriotic” in any conventional sense of the term and do not
identify themselves with the real and historic America but see the
United States merely as the host organism for the exercise of their Will
to Power. Whereas the American political tradition has been fixated on
the dangers of centralized state power, on the desirability of limited
government and non-intervention in foreign affairs, the neoconservatives
exalt and worship state power, and want America to become a hyper-state
in order to be an effective global hegemon. Even when they support
local government it is on the grounds that it is more efficient and
responsive to the demands of the Empire, not on Constitutional grounds.
The
neoconservative view of America as a hybrid, “imagined” nation had an
ardent supporter eight decades ago: in Mein Kampf Adolf Hitler argued
for a new, tightly centralized Germany by invoking the example of the
United States and the triumph of the Union over states’ rights.
He
concluded that “National Socialism, as a matter of principle, must lay
claim to the right to force its principles on the whole German nation
without consideration of previous federated state boundaries.”
Hitler
was going to make a new Germany the way he imagined it, or else destroy
it. In the same vein the Weekly Standard writers are “patriots” only
insofar as the America they imagine is a pliable tool of their global
design. Their relentless pursuit of an American Empire overseas is
coupled by their deliberate domestic transformation of the United
States’ federal government into a Leviathan unbound by constitutional
restraints. The lines they inserted into President Bush’s State of the
Union address last January aptly summarized their Messianic obsessions:
the call of history has come to the right country, we exercise power
without conquest, and sacrifice for the liberty of strangers, we know
that freedom is the right of every person and the future of every
nation: “The liberty we prize is not America’s gift to the world, it is
God’s gift to humanity.”
Such
megalomania is light years away from a patriotic appreciation of one’s
nation. A psychotic quest for power and dominance is the driving force,
and the “nationalist” discourse its justification. The reality is
visible in ultimate distress: Towards the end of the Second World War
Josef Goebbels welcomed the Allied bombing for its destruction of the
old bourgeois cuckoo-clock and marzipan Germany of the feudal
principalities. Driven by the same impulse, Bill Kristol’s “national
greatness” psychosis seeks to sweep away the old localized,
decentralized America of bingo parlors and little league games.
Most
heirs of the Trotskyite Left are internationalists and one-world
globalists, whereas all neoconservatives are unabashed imperialists.
The
former advocate “multilateralism,” in the form of an emerging
“international community” controlled by the United Nations or through a
gradual transfer of sovereign prerogatives to regional groupings
exemplified by the European Union. By contrast the neoconservative urge
for uninhibited physical control of other lands and peoples bears
resemblance to the New European Order of six decades ago, or to the
“Socialist Community” that succeeded it in Eastern Europe. Even when
they demand wars to export democracy, the term “democracy” is used as an
ideological concept. It does not signify broad participation of
informed citizens in the business of governance, but it denotes the
desirable social and political content of ostensibly popular decisions.
The process likely to produce undesirable outcomes –an Islamic
government in Iraq, say — is a priori “undemocratic.”
Whereas the Trotskyite Left is predominantly anti-militarist, the neoconservatives are enthusiastically militarist in a manner reminiscent of German and Soviet totalitarianism. Their strategic doctrine, promulgated into official policy last September, calls for an indefinite and massive military build-up unconnected to any identifiable military threat to the United States. Their scribes demand ‘citizen involvement,’ in effect, militarization of the populace, but the traditional ‘citizen soldier’ concept is reversed.
Whereas the Trotskyite Left is predominantly anti-militarist, the neoconservatives are enthusiastically militarist in a manner reminiscent of German and Soviet totalitarianism. Their strategic doctrine, promulgated into official policy last September, calls for an indefinite and massive military build-up unconnected to any identifiable military threat to the United States. Their scribes demand ‘citizen involvement,’ in effect, militarization of the populace, but the traditional ‘citizen soldier’ concept is reversed.
Their
goal is to get suitably indoctrinated young Americans to go and risk
their lives not for the honor and security of their own country, but for
the missions that have to be misrepresented to the public (e.g. the
non-existant Iraqi WMDs) in order to be made politically acceptable. As
Gary North has pointed out, neoconservative foreign policy is guns
before butter: “Butter always follows guns, but this is regarded as the
inescapable price of American regional presence abroad.” The
neoconservatives’ deep-seated distaste for the traditional societies,
regimes, and religion of the European continent, particularly Russia and
East European Slavs, is positively Hitlerian.
The
sentiment was most glaringly manifested in the 1999 NATO war against
the Serbs: William Kristol’s urge to vicariously “crush Serb skulls”
went way beyond the 1914 Viennese slogan “Serbien muss sterbien.” In
terms of strategic significance for the United States, however, the
neocons’ visceral Russophobia is mush more significant...Finish reading>> American NeoConservatism: Where Trotsky Meets Stalin and Hitler