The only thing we have to fear

This week’s Newsweek cover features a brilliant article by Indian American (and former Neocon) Fareed Zakaria titled, “Beyond Bush.” I wonder out-loud if Zakaria is a “former” Neocon because, reading this article, he sounds downright, dare I say it, “progressive.” Check it:

In the fall of 1982, I arrived in the United States as an 18-year-old student from India. The country was in rough shape. That December unemployment hit 10.8 percent, higher than at any point since World War II. Interest rates hovered around 15 percent. Abroad, the United States was still reeling from Vietnam and Watergate. The Soviet Union was on a roll, expanding its influence from Afghanistan to Angola to Central America. That June, Israel invaded Lebanon, making a tense situation in the Middle East even more volatile

Today, by almost all objective measures, the United States sits on top of the world. But the atmosphere in Washington could not be more different from 1982. We have become a nation consumed by fear, worried about terrorists and rogue nations, Muslims and Mexicans, foreign companies and free trade, immigrants and international organizations. The strongest nation in the history of the world, we see ourselves besieged and overwhelmed. While the Bush administration has contributed mightily to this state of affairs, at this point it has reversed itself on many of its most egregious policies–from global warming to North Korea to Iraq…

In a global survey released last week, most countries polled believed that China would act more responsibly in the world than the United States. How does a Leninist dictatorship come across more sympathetically than the oldest constitutional democracy in the world? Some of this is, of course, the burden of being the biggest. But the United States has been the richest and most powerful nation in the world for almost a century, and for much of this period it was respected, admired and occasionally even loved. The problem today is not that America is too strong but that it is seen as too arrogant, uncaring and insensitive. Countries around the world believe that the United States, obsessed with its own notions of terrorism, has stopped listening to the rest of the world. [Link]

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p>Fareed uses the next eight pages to just break this mother down. Any of you who have been watching the so-called primary “debates” thus far will have witnessed that which Zakaria points out next. The Republicans try to scare us and the Democrats try to prove they are as tough as Republicans. Fear, fear, fear:

More troubling than any of Bush’s rhetoric is that of the Republicans who wish to succeed him. “They hate you!” says Rudy Giuliani in his new role as fearmonger in chief, relentlessly reminding audiences of all the nasty people out there. “They don’t want you to be in this college!” he recently warned an audience at Oglethorpe University in Atlanta. “Or you, or you, or you,” he said, reportedly jabbing his finger at students. In the first Republican debate he warned, “We are facing an enemy that is planning all over this world, and it turns out planning inside our country, to come here and kill us.” On the campaign trail, Giuliani plays a man exasperated by the inability of Americans to see the danger staring them in the face. “This is reality, ma’am,” he told a startled woman at Oglethorpe. “You’ve got to clear your head…”

The competition to be the tough guy is producing new policy ideas, all right–ones that range from bad to insane. Romney, who bills himself as the smart, worldly manager, recently explained that while “some people have said we ought to close Guantánamo, my view is we ought to double [the size of] Guantánamo.” In fact, Romney should recognize that Guantánamo does not face space constraints. The reason that President Bush wants to close it down–and it is he who has expressed that desire–is that it is an unworkable legal mess with enormous strategic, political and moral costs. In a real war you hold prisoners of war until the end of hostilities. When does that happen in the war on terror? Does Romney propose that the United States keep an ever-growing population of suspects in jail indefinitely without trials as part of a new American system of justice?… [Link]

I remember well this next moment from the first Democratic debate. Obama had it right at first and then turned into a sheep:

In the South Carolina presidential debate, when candidates were asked how they would respond to another terror strike, they promptly vowed to attack, retaliate and blast the hell out of, well, somebody. Barack Obama, the only one to answer differently, quickly realized his political vulnerability and dutifully threatened retaliation as well. After the debate, his opponents leaked furiously that his original response proved he didn’t have the fortitude to be president.

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p>In fact, Obama’s initial response was the right one. He said that the first thing he would do was make sure that the emergency response was effective, then ensure we had the best intelligence possible to figure out who had caused the attack, and then move with allies to dismantle the network responsible.

We will never be able to prevent a small group of misfits from planning some terrible act of terror. No matter how far-seeing and competent our intelligence and law-enforcement officials, people will always be able to slip through the cracks in a large, open and diverse country. The real test of American leadership is not whether we can make 100 percent sure we prevent the attack, but rather how we respond to it. [Link]

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p>Don’t get me wrong, I’m not drinking the whole glass of this Kool-aid. It is easy for people like Zakaria to argue a position well, but let’s not forget that he was one of the intellectuals in favor of this “war on terror” in the first place. Like a pool of quicksand this “war” keeps getting worse for us when we place fear above all other emotions in deliberating the future of our country:

The atmosphere of fear and panic we are currently engendering is likely to produce the opposite effect. Were there to be another attack, politicians would fulfill their pledges to strike back, against someone. A retaliatory strike would be appropriate and important–if you could hit the right targets. But what if the culprits were based in Hamburg or Madrid or Trenton? It is far more likely that a future attack will come from countries that are unknowingly and involuntarily sheltering terrorists. Are we going to bomb Britain and Spain because they housed terror cells?

The other likely effect of another terror attack would be an increase in the restrictions on movement, privacy and civil liberties that have already imposed huge economic, political and moral costs on America. The process of screening passengers at airports, which costs nearly $5 billion a year, gets more cumbersome every year as new potential “risks” are discovered. The visa system, which has already become restrictive and forbidding, will get more so every time one thug is let in. [Link]

In the meantime, rather than simply be angry at current policies, we can all start asking ourselves and our candidates what we want to do next. Do we want a future where we prosecute children or a future where we are admired in the world again? As this house of cards folds I hope we all challenge our candidates into acting with vision instead of out of fear Most importantly, let’s start to get more involved in this election cycle. I have been mostly sitting on the sidelines because I thought it was way to early to be paying attention to this circus. It isn’t too early to start educating ourselves on the issues though.

108 thoughts on “The only thing we have to fear

  1. frantically paging the SM Intern Cleanup! Cleanup!

    What kind of Jean-Sartre-meets-Anais-Nin Paris in the 50s life do you lead?

    Rahul: Past tense. Those wonderful days came to a screeching halt once I moved back to Karachi. If it’s not a query about the “short kameez”, it’s about the “kaam-wala lenghas”, and I can’t maintain any ahem interest.

  2. 15 Yo Dad: “I came to this country in the summer of Love – 1967.”

    Wanted to say hello to a peer. I came to this country in 1972, the year of US withdrawal from Vietnam and Watergate hearings. Keep commenting!

  3. “Wanted to say hello to a peer. I came to this country in 1972, the year of US withdrawal from Vietnam and Watergate hearings. Keep commenting!

    I meant 1973. I was having a senior citizen moment.

  4. Giuliani has a snowball’s chance in hell of winning. He chickened out of the Senate race against Hillary citing Prostate Cancer, of all things. Hillary wasn’t even a New Yorker at the time. Plus Republican base does not gel with Giuliani. Giuliani has no base in the South. Northeast will go Dems. Giuliani doesn’t give a rat’s ass about the “muslim problem” which countries like India are suffering from, while the US has fanned all the flames. He doesn’t care about the righteous crowd. He looks senile in front of Romney and McCain. But he is a good anti-crime guy.

  5. Rahul: Past tense. Those wonderful days came to a screeching halt once I moved back to Karachi. If it’s not a query about the “short kameez”, it’s about the “kaam-wala lenghas”, and I can’t maintain any *ahem* interest.

    Have you tried this? Surely, there’s some thick long rods in Karachi?

  6. Manju #70 and #71,

    Good one, but I think Strauss would say it was Machiavelli that blew the cover.

  7. oh no not another post above definition of ‘South Asain’ and who should be defined as what. We make it really easy for rascists by being so petty and divisive with comments like the above in #107. live and let live. According to joe average you are brown and so south asain. Or in the UK just Asain.