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The ex-Neo.


America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative ne·o·con·ser·va·tism also ne·o-con·ser·va·tism  
n.
An intellectual and political movement in favor of political, economic, and social conservatism that arose in opposition to the perceived liberalism of the 1960s:
 Legacy, by Francis Fukuyama Yoshihiro Francis Fukuyama (born October 27, 1952, Chicago, Illinois) is an American philosopher, political economist and author. Early Life
Francis Fukuyama was born October 27, 1952, in the Hyde Park neighborhood of Chicago.
 (Yale, 240 pp., $25)

In the summer of 2004, in a widely debated article in The National Interest, Francis Fukuyama--one of America's foremost political thinkers--publicly broke with the Bush administration and neoconservatism neoconservatism

U.S. political movement. It originated in the 1960s among conservatives and some liberals who were repelled by or disillusioned with what they viewed as the political and cultural trends of the time, including leftist political radicalism, lack of respect for
 over the Iraq War Iraq War: see under Persian Gulf Wars.
Iraq War
 or Second Persian Gulf War

Brief conflict in 2003 between Iraq and a combined force of troops largely from the U.S. and Great Britain; and a subsequent U.S.
. Much of the interest in his current book, America at the Crossroads, is centered on this controversy. The book's real significance, however, lies not in a rehash re·hash  
tr.v. re·hashed, re·hash·ing, re·hash·es
1. To bring forth again in another form without significant alteration: rehashing old ideas.

2. To discuss again.
 of Fukuyama's past pronouncements on the Iraq War, but in his prescriptions for the future--the creation of new and extra-constitutional institutions of global governance Global governance refers to political interaction and the creation and empowering of international organizations aimed at solving problems that affect more than one state or region, when there is no democratic power of enforcing compliance. .

After beginning with a brief overview of his main arguments, Fukuyama reviews the history of neoconservatism: Alcove 1 at CCNY CCNY City College of New York (obsolete)
CCNY Collector's Club of New York (philatelic group) 
, Trotskyism, liberal anti-Communism, The Public Interest and "unintended consequences For the "Law of unintended consequences", see Unintended consequence

Unintended Consequences is a novel by author John Ross, first published in 1996 by Accurate Press.
," Commentary and the Cold War, Leo Strauss Leo Strauss (September 20, 1899 – October 18, 1973), was a German-born Jewish-American political philosopher who specialized in the study of classical political philosophy.  and the importance of "regime," and the influence of nuclear strategist Albert Wohlstetter Albert Wohlstetter (born 1913, died January 10, 1997) was a major intellectual force behind efforts to avoid the spread of nuclear weapons and the need to develop nonnuclear alternatives. . Some may quibble QUIBBLE. A slight difficulty raised without necessity or propriety; a cavil.
     2. No justly eminent member of the bar will resort to a quibble in his argument.
 that Fukuyama uses the Stalinist word "Trotskyite" instead of "Trotskyist," or mischaracterizes the division between Harry Jaffa ("John Philip Sousa") Straussians and Allan Bloom ("Wagnerian") Straussians. But on balance this section is very nicely written: a clear guide for beginners, including mainstream journalists.

Fukuyama also draws nuanced distinctions between the William Kristol/Robert Kagan viewpoint and the more "democratic realist" wing of neoconservatism exemplified by Charles Krauthammer Charles Krauthammer, (born 13 March 1950 in New York City[1][2]), is a Pulitzer Prize-winning syndicated columnist and commentator. Krauthammer appears regularly as a guest commentator on Fox News.  and Jeane Kirkpatrick Jeane Jordan Kirkpatrick (November 19 1926 – December 7 2006) was an American ambassador and an ardent anticommunist. After serving as Ronald Reagan's foreign policy adviser in his 1980 campaign and later in his Cabinet, the longtime Democrat turned Republican was . He argues that the Kristol/Kagan Foreign Affairs article of 1996 that called for a broader democratic interventionism in·ter·ven·tion·ism  
n.
The policy or practice of intervening, especially:
a. The policy of intervening in the affairs of another sovereign state.

b.
 successfully "redefined" neoconservatism and moved it away from the more constrained views of the first generation of neoconservatives, including Kristol pere.

Fukuyama characterizes four schools of American foreign policy: neoconservative (promotion of democracy, benevolent U.S. hegemony); realist (traditional balance of power); liberal internationalist ("seeks to transcend power politics through international law and institutions"); and nationalist Jacksonian ("narrow security-related view" of American interests). He himself has left the neoconservative camp and is now a "realistic Wilsonian" or "hard-headed" liberal internationalist (seeking "not the transcendence ... of power politics but its regularization reg·u·lar·ize  
tr.v. reg·u·lar·ized, reg·u·lar·iz·ing, reg·u·lar·iz·es
To make regular; cause to conform.



reg
 through institutional constraints").

NATIONAL REVIEW readers might rightly complain that this list of four schools is far from comprehensive. After all, Jon Kyl, John Bolton, Henry Hyde, Newt Gingrich, Norm Coleman, and most Republican members of Congress could best be described as "Reagan internationalists," part of what Rich Lowry has labeled the "Reagan Synthesis." This coalition combines a strong baseline Jacksonian nationalism ("Don't tread on me") with strands of Wilsonianism (democracy matters), Hamiltonianism (promotion of free trade), and realism (power politics)--to use the classic taxonomy formulated by Walter Russell Mead “Walter Mead” redirects here. For the English Test cricketer, see Walter Mead (cricketer).

Walter Russell Mead (born 12 June, 1952, Columbia, South Carolina) is the Henry A. Kissinger senior fellow for U.S.
. Fukuyama appears to have a visceral distaste for the Jacksonian tradition, which he mischaracterizes as "isolationist i·so·la·tion·ism  
n.
A national policy of abstaining from political or economic relations with other countries.



i
"; Mead says it's the Jeffersonians, not the Jacksonians, who are isolationists and identifies Reagan himself as a Jacksonian figure who successfully combined a number of complementary American traditions.

Since his original "End of History" article in 1989, Fukuyama has gradually moved from Hegelian idealism to a more "Marxian" materialism. He tells us that many have misunderstood his thought concerning the "end of history," which was an "argument about modernization," not about ideology--that is to say, it was materialist, not idealist. Perhaps. But Fukuyama is careful to cite in this regard his 1992 book, not his 1989 article, which emphasized "consciousness," "ideas," and "ideology" over material factors. In 1989 he wrote: "Have we in fact reached the end of history? ... If we accept the idealist premises laid out above, we must seek an answer to this question in the realm of ideology and consciousness."

America at the Crossroads has a long chapter on promoting modernization, democracy, and economic growth in developing countries, in which Fukuyama makes many sensible points that parallel arguments he has made before. He stumbles, however, when he asserts that the U.S. "has become steadily less generous" and claims that the U.S. ranks 21st out of 22 leading developed nations in foreign giving (even when private aid is counted). My Hudson Institute colleague Carol Adelman, a former high-ranking official at the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID USAID United States Agency for International Development
USAID Agencia de los Estados Unidos para el Desarrollo Internacional (Spanish) 
), says this is simply wrong: The U.S. ranks 11th of 22 leading donor countries (counting private aid); government foreign aid has doubled between 2000 and 2004, and has also increased as a percentage of gross national income.

On the broader geopolitical ge·o·pol·i·tics  
n. (used with a sing. verb)
1. The study of the relationship among politics and geography, demography, and economics, especially with respect to the foreign policy of a nation.

2.
a.
 front, Fukuyama commits a more serious error: He minimizes the global conflict with radical Islam. He tells us that "rhetoric" about the "global war on terror This article is about U.S. actions, and those of other states, after September 11, 2001. For other conflicts, see Terrorism.

The War on Terror (also known as the War on Terrorism
 should cease" because "conceiving the larger struggle as a global war ... vastly over-states" the problem. "We are fighting a small group of fanatics," he suggests, "sheltering behind a larger group of sympathizers." ("Before the Iraq war, we were probably at war with no more than a few thousand people ...")

Moreover, "the most dangerous people are not pious Muslims in the Middle East, but alienated uprooted young people in Hamburg, London, or Amsterdam." The conflict, therefore, is a response to modernization and globalization globalization

Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation
 and "cannot be understood primarily" in terms of religion or culture. Indeed, "the major battlegrounds are as likely to be in Western Europe as in the Middle East." Relying on French theorists Gilles Kepel and Olivier Roy, Fukuyama claims that the political appeal of radical Islam is weak. He also draws a clear distinction between radical Islamists and simply ideological Islamists who seek to establish an Islamic regime through political means and who (in Fukuyama's view) are "not necessarily ... hostile to democracy."

There is, of course, some truth to Fukuyama's contention that radical Islamist (jihadist Noun 1. Jihadist - a Muslim who is involved in a jihad
Moslem, Muslim - a believer in or follower of Islam
) ideology and deracinated Muslim immigrants in Europe are, to some extent, the byproducts of incomplete modernization. Nevertheless, it is too clever by half to suggest that the problem is primarily one of a flawed modernization-globalization process rather than a religio-cultural-ideological conflict, and that the terrorist crisis itself is centered mainly in the West (Europe) rather than in the Islamic world and the Middle East. The Western outposts of radical Islam are just that: outposts. The money (mostly Saudi), propagandists (imams), ideological indoctrination in·doc·tri·nate  
tr.v. in·doc·tri·nat·ed, in·doc·tri·nat·ing, in·doc·tri·nates
1. To instruct in a body of doctrine or principles.

2.
, terrorist/military training (sometimes Iranian), logistics, and psychological-religious support come from religious Muslims (self-described, whether "authentic" or not) in the Middle East. Hamas, Hezbollah, and the madrassas emanate from the Middle East. The majority of al-Qaeda adherents are Middle Eastern in origin and consider themselves "pious." The Danish cartoon controversy was activated not in Europe, but in the Middle East.

Remember, eleven Muslim ambassadors from Islamic countries (including, significantly, Turkey) demanded that the Danish prime minister curb press freedom within Denmark. Fukuyama is too sanguine about the "democratic" aspects of Islamist (but non-jihadist) ideology. Islamists (whether violent or nonviolent) seek to establish sharia (Islamic law) as the basis for government. Even a non-violent Islamist regime would be an illiberal il·lib·er·al  
adj.
1. Narrow-minded; bigoted.

2. Archaic Ungenerous, mean, or stingy.

3. Archaic
a. Lacking liberal culture.

b. Ill-bred; vulgar.
 one, rejecting both freedom of religion for non-Muslim believers and freedom for the non-religious. Thus, a "democratic" Islamist regime means an "illiberal democracy," in the Fareed Zakaria sense.

Although almost all eyes are focused on Fukuyama's break with the Bush administration and neoconservative thinking, the truly revolutionary part of the book is his embrace, however hesitant, of an extra-constitutional transnationalism. To be sure, all of this is done with often contradictory "on one hand, on the other hand" qualifiers, and further obfuscated by the language of social science.

Fukuyama calls for an "agenda of multiple-multilateralisms." He tells us that, as "realistic Wilsonians, ... we do not want to replace national sovereignty with unaccountable international organizations" like the U.N. "On the other hand, we do not now have an adequate set of horizontal mechanisms of accountability between the vertical stovepipes we label states."

"Horizontal accountability" would presumably pre·sum·a·ble  
adj.
That can be presumed or taken for granted; reasonable as a supposition: presumable causes of the disaster.
 mean some transnational mechanism that would make, for example, the American nation-state and the Canadian or French nation-state democratically accountable to each other. "Horizontal accountability" between states is needed, Fukuyama says, first because it would facilitate globalization, and second because "few [nations] trust the United States" to be "sufficiently benevolent" without "the subjection of American power to more formal constraints."

If Fukuyama were merely saying that Americans should, as a matter of prudential statesmanship, attempt to secure the support of major democratic allies before acting in important international crises, that would be fine. But he is hinting at something else: He is suggesting that new transnational organizations not accountable to American democratic institutions should make decisions concerning American foreign policy. How else to explain the following: "Although international cooperation will have to be based on sovereign states for the foreseeable future, shared ideas of legitimacy and human rights will weaken objections that the United States should not be accountable to regimes that are not themselves accountable."

Why would Americans want to be accountable to the unaccountable? Because, Fukuyama says, Americans believe that if "unchecked power is corrupting in a domestic context," the same holds true internationally. But, of course, the "checks and balances" of the U.S. Constitution already apply to both domestic and foreign affairs and are within the context of our accountable democratic system. What Fukuyama is suggesting is extra-constitutional: some new transnational mechanism of "checks and balances" outside of American constitutional democracy and genuine democratic accountability. Francis Fukuyama, one of our leading democratic theorists, may want to reconsider this flirtation with post-democratic thinking.

Mr. Fonte is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute.
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Title Annotation:America at the Crossroads: Democracy, Power, and the Neoconservative Legacy
Author:Fonte, John
Publication:National Review
Article Type:Book review
Date:Apr 24, 2006
Words:1537
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