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September 5, 2023

If the obvious impacts of America’s proxy war in Ukraine are lives lost and debt accrued, a quieter impact is the neoconservatives’ revival.  A few weeks ago, the Biden administration conferred the deputy secretary of state position on Victoria Nuland, a policymaker in almost every 21st-century American intervention abroad and an ardent supporter of our involvement in Ukraine.  Recently, William Kristol, who along with Nuland’s husband Robert Kagan co-founded the Project for the New American Century, which drove the push for the Iraq invasion, launched a $2-million organization, Republicans for Ukraine, encouraging congressional Republicans to fund the proxy war despite a majority of the public turning against it.

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Even if history truly does come as tragedy and repeat as farce, the neoconservatives’ re-emergence is extraordinary, because Iraq isn’t the only tragedy, or farce, on their sixty-year record.  This record has nothing to do with the hard-nosed, practical, anti-communist, and anti-Iranian outlook with which it’s sometimes associated — one shared by many Republicans.  Instead, it flows from a broader foreign and domestic project of power accrual and social control driven by ideologues and administrators in Washington, D.C.  The project’s effects reach wide and deep: though the Center for American Progress and Democracy: A Journal of Ideas feed the Biden White House personnel and policies, their insider playbook was created by the neocons, whose think-tanks and magazines laid the groundwork for an insulated class of political ideologues to wreak their will on the rest of us.

Why do their moves keep working?  And how can we minimize their influence?

Begun in the 1960s by a loose collection of Democratic intellectuals, academics, and administrators like Irving Kristol, Donald Kagan, James Q. Wilson, and Daniel Patrick Moynihan disillusioned by urban and campus unrest, neoconservatism’s commitments were formed in the university seminar and its influence in Washington’s bureaucracy.  Unlike most Republicans, neocons’ solution to turmoil on the ground wasn’t to relocate power there.  Instead, they wanted to replace top-down social programs with top-down moral reforms, “the more orthodox and traditional, the better,” to rescue America from decline.

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Next to the strange extremes of the 1970s left, this approach passed for realism, but at bottom it was lifted from the clean lines of a seminar run by intellectuals or believers — an extension of the uncompromising, hermetic ideological battles that Irving Kristol, an ex-Marxist, first waged decades before.  Its priorities amounted to supporting a “free market” of deregulations and mergers that disciplined people with productive work, using national enforcement against populations that refused to be disciplined, and uniting a fragmented country to pursue our values and interests against totalitarian enemies abroad.

In practice, the approach was messier.  “Free trade” after 1990 immiserated laboring populations and put too-big-to-fail American investment banks in hock to China.  The Iraq War and post-9/11 administrative growth ballooned the deficit, enriching military contractors and creating a Department of Homeland Security now being turned on Americans.  Republicans developed a reputation as racists thanks to militarized law enforcement and rhetoric blaming the effects of outsourcing on genetic or moral failure — a legacy the party is overcoming with its growing appeal to a multiracial working class.

Finally, progressivism came to power, directly and indirectly, off neoconservatism.  The staffers of the Obama and Biden White Houses came from the defense, administrative, and academic sectors neocons helped grow.  The invasion of Iraq was used immediately by progressives as an excuse to question America’s alliance with Israel, and its long-term failure gave the Obama White House room to launch a pro-Iranian pivot that continues today.  And the new war on white nationalism, supported by Bush administration alumni, is the mirror image of the War on Crime, where blue-collar conservative whites are labeled, as black Americans distrustful of the system once were, as backward and morally decayed.

How does a movement with this many failures keep influence?  The answer is the neocons’ tactics.  Operating out of magazines like The Public Interest and The Weekly Standard and think-tanks like the American Enterprise Institute and the Project for the New American Century, they seeded the bureaucracy with allies or acolytes and ran insider plays from there.  William Kristol, Irving Kristol’s son, is the obvious example.  A former official in George H.W. Bush’s White House, Kristol pushed the invasion of Iraq from his Century Project and featured John DiIulio, a student of James Q. Wilson, urging a “war on crime” in his magazine The Weekly Standard.  But he also used the Sunday talk shows to help another insider, George Conway, break the Lewinsky affair: a crusade against immorality that, whatever its merits, featured the government leaks, FBI overreach, and prosecutorial attacks against “misinformation” that we’re experiencing in hyperdrive today.  Ten years later, Kristol made another doubtful play: pushing the nomination of Sarah Palin for vice president, in what most observers saw as a ploy to get populist votes without delivering populists a real candidate.

During those years, a host of neoconservatives made their bones in these establishments, and they’ve expanded their connections since, spreading a gospel of top-down moral reform despite lacking a constituency.  This year alone, you can read David Frum on how “the Next American President Will Need to Defeat Isolationism”; David Brooks on “How to Restore Morality”; Bret Stephens on how “Angry populism is a force that can only be stoked, never assuaged”; and Robert Kagan, Donald Kagan’s son, on how our values and interests are inextricable and demand aiding Ukraine.  Meantime, ex-representative Liz Cheney traverses the think-tank circuit, and Victoria Nuland puts her ideas into practice at the highest levels of administration.

These ideas seem to be working.  Ukraine has become a more lethal version of the corporate-and-administrative confluence Dick Cheney and Donald Rumsfeld created in Iraq.  Debt increases, along with potential threats, and contractors are enriched, but unlike in Iraq, American casualties are nonexistent, which limits public anger, so the war can go on, imaginably, forever.  This isn’t a conspiracy; it’s the inertia of vested interests acting for their own benefit.  Meantime, America is nominally unified around the war by SNL tributes to Ukraine, the silencing of artists with other political commitments, administration-backed Tiktok campaigns, and calls to sustain the “post-World War II American-backed international order.”