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Journalist Christopher Hitchens fully embraces the Bush war
camp
By David Walsh
7 October 2002
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In an article posted September 26 on the web site of the
Nationthe US liberal weeklyjournalist Christopher
Hitchens announced that he was giving up his column in the magazine
after more than two decades. His final piece is entitled Taking
Sides, and Hitchens makes clear that the side
he has taken is the camp of war against Iraq spearheaded by the
Bush administration.
The British-born Hitchens is a former left, who
has moved openly and sharply to the right over the past several
years. During the impeachment drive of 1998-99, engineered by
the extreme right, Hitchens foamed at the mouth about the sins
of Bill Clinton. Indeed at one point he actively intervened, playing
a small but dirty role, and did his best to pin a perjury charge
on a Clinton aide. During the 2000 election hijacking Hitchens
made common cause with the extreme right again, denouncing Democrats
for squealing about the Bush camps fraud and
thuggery. Following the September 11 terror attacks, the Nation
columnist became a vocal proponent of a US military attack on
Afghanistan, in the name of the fight against Islamic fascism.
The essential argument of his filthy swansong in the Nation
is similar to the one advanced by Bush administration officials:
Saddam Hussein is a monstera sadistic megalomaniac,
in Hitchenss termswho must be removed from power.
He writes, I dont particularly care, even in a small
way, to be a hostage of Saddam myself. It is noteworthy
that Hitchens does not object, even in a small way,
to being a hostage of US imperialism and its project of world
domination.
Hitchens has become something of an expert in the art of cheap
and empty moralizing. This was his approach in the Clinton scandals
and it is now applied to the problem of Iraq. There is hardly
anything more bankrupt than the demonizing of a political figure
such as Hussein, considered entirely apart from the history of
imperialism in the region, as well as the evolution of the Iraqi
nationalist movement. It is impossible to base principled politics
on the bad man theory of history.
The journalist continues, There is not the least doubt
that he [Hussein] had acquired some of the means of genocide and
hopes to collect some more. Hitchens here employs a method
favored by Vice President Dick Cheney in several recent speecheshe
uses the phrases not the least doubt without providing
the least amount of evidence.
Hitchenss attempts to connect Hussein to the Islamic
fundamentalistsincluding reviving the widely debunked claim
that alleged suicide hijacker Mohamed Atta met with Iraqi agents
in Praguedo not even appear to convince him. He comments
defensively, People keep bleating that Saddam is not a fundamentalist.
But he did rejoice in the attacks on New York and Washington and
Pennsylvania, and he does believe that every little bit hurts.
This is simply gibberish: either Hussein was connected to the
suicide bombing, of which there is not a shred of evidence and
which has no political logic, or he wasnt. Hitchenss
fishing expedition is no more convincing than the White House
campaign of lies.
Hitchens solidarizes himself with the Iraqi and Kurdish
opponents of this filthy menace. Which opponents? Legitimate
popular opposition to Hussein? No, in this article and others,
Hitchens makes clear that he means the CIA-financed Iraqi National
Congress (INC) and the opportunist nationalists of the Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK), who have lined up in support of a US
invasion in hopes of sharing in the Iraqi oil wealth once the
present regime is deposed and the country broken up. None of these
forces represents a progressive alternative to the Hussein dictatorship.
They are merely stooges in waiting.
Concluding his column, Hitchens explains that when he began
working at the Nation, it had been described to him as
a debating ground between liberals and radicals. He
goes on: I have come to realize that the magazine itself
takes a side in this argument, and is becoming the voice and the
echo chamber of those who truly believe that John Ashcroft is
a greater menace than Osama bin Laden. The blithe, arrogant
tone with which Hitchens makes this pronouncement reveals something
about the privileged and reactionary circles in which he travels.
Can there be any doubt that the overwhelming majority of the worlds
population lives in far greater fear of the US government and
military, which have demonstrated their willingness to bombard
and murder anyone who opposes them, than the fugitive and isolated
bin Laden and his ragtag forces?
Moreover, one must insist on a fact that Hitchens knowingly
leaves out: Islamic fundamentalism in Central Asia owes a great
deal in the first place to Washingtons sponsorship. Bin
Laden and his cohorts were encouraged and assisted as part of
the plan to destabilize the USSR in the late 1970s and 1980s.
They constitute a Frankenstein monster produced by the Carter
and Reagan administrations.
In a previous article on Iraq (Macbeth in Mesopotamia)
Hitchens resorted to the type of argument he advanced last autumn
in relation to the proposed attack on the Taliban regime in Afghanistan.
Addressing an audience that might have some knowledge of the history
of the region, the Nation columnist was obliged to note
in the recent piece that the US had at least a hand in the
coup that brought Hussein to power, that it encouraged
him in his attack on Iran and that he was given the
greenest of lights to invade Kuwait. He continued, [T]hese,
too, were all interventions in the affairs of Iraq. And if there
can be interventions one way, in favor of the regime, there is
at least a potential argument that an intervention to cancel such
debts would be justifiable.
To paraphrase what we wrote last year, the logic of this reasoning
is unimpeachable. Since the US ruling elite has aided Hussein
in the past and generally inflicted misery on the Iraqi population
(Hitchens omits the murderous character of the sanctions policy),
it should be given a blank check to intervene againand in
a far more devastating fashion.
US policies have proven disastrous for the people of Iraq,
Afghanistan and the entire region. They are driven, not by an
interest in giving the Iraqis a chance to have a democratic
life, as Hitchens absurdly claims, but primarily by the
desire to control the countrys oil, a word that curiously
never emerges from the columnists keyboard.
The responsibility for overthrowing the Hussein regime belongs
to the Iraqi workers and poor, in alliance with the international
working class, and not the American military.
When in history has liberation ever resulted as a happy byproduct
of imperialist intervention? Hitchenss reactionary reasoning
has been standard fare for colonialisms apologists since
some time in the mid-nineteenth century. Every brutal incursion
by the British Empire into Africa and Asia, which coincidentally
enriched a handful back in the mother country, was justified on
the basis of its civilizing mission.
In the twentieth century Japans attack on Manchuria,
fascist Italys invasion of Ethiopia and Nazi Germanys
occupation of parts of Czechoslovakia were all defended as humanitarian
interventions by their perpetrators. Japan declared its
intention to establish an earthly paradise, defending
Manchuria from Chinese bandits. Hitler announced Germanys
desire to end ethnic tensions and violence in Czechoslovakia and
safeguard the national individuality of the German and Czech
peoples, in an operation filled with earnest desire
to serve the true interests of the peoples dwelling in the area.
There is nothing new under the sun when it comes to the lies
of imperialisms apologists in defense of brigandage. Over
the course of the past century the American ruling class has organized
regime change in countless cases, replacing leftist
or nationalist regimes that it did not care for with puppet governments
prepared to bloodily suppress political and popular opposition.
As to the claim that Washington will liberate Iraq,
Trotsky noted decades ago that American imperialism is in
essence ruthlessly rude, predatory, in the full sense of the word,
and criminal, but that America is always liberating
somebody, thats her profession.
There is nothing innovative about Hitchenss approach.
The crudity of his arguments speaks to his political and social
evolution. He feels no more need than the gangsters running the
US government to explain or convince.
The manner of the journalists departure from the Nation
speaks volumes about the liberal and erstwhile liberal milieu
in which his foul views have incubated. In a statement published
in their October 14 edition, the Nations editors
write of their keen regret that Hitchens is leaving
their pages. They go on, We will miss his eloquent and passionate
voice and his elegantly crafted prose. As far as Hitchenss
style goes, to each his own. Those who are impressed by his bloated,
casually dispensed cynicism are either political novices or as
jaded and degenerate as he.
More significantly, however, the editors are singing the praises
of a man who, over the past number of years, has lined up on the
most critical questions of the day with the ultra-right, supporting
an extra-constitutional coup détat, the stealing
of a national election and predatory, neo-colonialist wars in
Central Asia and the Middle East. What does it say about the Nation
that it didnt kick him out years ago? There is some
question as to whether Hitchenss or the editors statement
is the more repugnant.
Hitchenss political evolution is instructive, if not
particularly surprising. He represents a type excreted out of
the pores of the English middle class in considerable quantities
over the past century or so, from Oswald and Cynthia Mosley (one-time
Independent Labour Party members who formed the British Union
of Fascists in 1932) to the legion of former Communist Party members
and fellow travelers (Kingsley Amis, Iris Murdoch, Stephen Spender,
et al) who discovered the Tory Party, the Catholic Church or the
CIA during the Cold War.
What has distinguished the thinking and writings of this social
layer has been a reliance on the hodgepodge of English empiricism
and an essential lack of seriousness. The British ruling class
has never been unduly worried by such figures; it simply waits
patiently, ready to bestow an OBE or even a knighthood when the
inevitable change of heart takes place.
In the 1970s Hitchens was apparently a member or supporter
of the state-capitalist International Socialist group (the forerunner
of the Socialist Workers Party) in Britain and makes much of having
sold their newspaper on London streets at the time. In other words,
he once evinced a certain sympathy for Trotskyism. Given a considerable
predisposition to cynicism and careerism (the Nation itself
is a hothouse of cynicism), Hitchens lost whatever confidence
he once had in the perspective of socialism under the impact of
the defeats suffered by the working class and the collapse of
the Soviet Union in the 1980s and 1990s. The project of social
revolution let him down, and he has moved on.
This is an individual who wants to be on the side of power,
who likes flattery and money, who is easily impressed. The new
power, indeed the only power in his eyes, is American imperialism,
and more specifically, the extreme right in the US. He only awaits
an invitation from the White House.
Hitchens, who has been hobnobbing with the wealthy and influential
for years, is leaving the Nation primarily because the
association with its tepid liberals is increasingly untenable,
given his new friends on the far right (although the opportunity
to enrich himself elsewhere no doubt comes into it too). He is
anxious to burn his bridges. We have no hesitation in predicting
that Hitchens has not completed his evolution. There is a logic
to these processes. This is a political freebooter and scoundrel
who is fated to end up in the company of sinister and fascist-minded
elements.
See Also:
Journalist who
turned in Clinton aide
Scoundrel time redux: Christopher Hitchens as a social type
[13 February 1999]
The US election
Journalist Christopher Hitchens: from left charlatan
to mouthpiece for the Republican right
[27 November 2000]
The political depravity
of journalist Christopher Hitchens
[5 October 2001]
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