Tuesday, February 21, 2006

A neocon true believer recants

Francis Fukuyama, one of the intellectual godfathers of the Neo-Conservative movement, now wishes it would just go away (click me for full story):

Mr Fukuyama now thinks the war in Iraq is the wrong sort of war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time.


"The most basic misjudgment was an overestimation of the threat facing the United States from radical Islamism," he argues.

"Although the new and ominous possibility of undeterrable terrorists armed with weapons of mass destruction did indeed present itself, advocates of the war wrongly conflated this with the threat presented by Iraq and with the rogue state/proliferation problem more generally."

Mr Fukuyama, one of the US's most influential public intellectuals, concludes that "it seems very unlikely that history will judge either the intervention [in Iraq] itself or the ideas animating it kindly".

Going further, he says the movements' advocates are Leninists who "believed that history can be pushed along with the right application of power and will. Leninism was a tragedy in its Bolshevik version, and it has returned as farce when practised by the United States".

Too bad Shrub doesn't read newspapers or he might start to worry.

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