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Spencer Ackerman: TNR fired me before it published its Iraq symposium. Oh well...

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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-16-06 09:22 PM
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Spencer Ackerman: TNR fired me before it published its Iraq symposium. Oh well...
CRUELTY AND SILENCE. The New Republic fired me before it published its Iraq symposium. Oh well -- it had been made clear to me that I wouldn't have been invited to contribute anyway. So now I take up my new role: foul-weather critic of its latest spineless Iraq editorial. (In TNR-speak, a "lede.")

Among the most annoying of TNR tropes is the flight to meta-analysis as soon as the recognition dawns that the magazine can't win an argument. And here, it pains and saddens me to say, TNR embraces it like a security blanket. First, TNR concedes that nothing it can possibly desire is likely to occur: "The U.S. presence in Iraq will not last long. Perhaps this new political reality will serve as shock therapy, scaring Iraq's warring factions into negotiations that can prevent the worst sectarian warfare. But perhaps not." The "perhaps not" is an intellectual prophylactic: it changes the subject before one can ask what in the world the U.S. could tell the Sunnis and the Shiites that could make them believe that that their interests are better served by peace than by war. If TNR has any idea what it means by this, it has an obligation to say so. But -- and, my friends, I can tell you, because I went to those Thursday editorial meetings for years -- these people have no idea what they mean.

No matter. Then the magazine calls for super-duper diplomacy with Iraq's neighbors -- but the kind of diplomacy that rushes blood to TNR's crotch: "It, too, must be brutal: It must include threats and promises, alliances and coalitions -- with the threat of being left out. A new campaign should lay the groundwork for agreements prior to the calling of a peace conference that would include Iraq's parties and its neighbors, as well as the United States, the European Union, and Russia." Hysterically, the magazine concedes in the next sentence that it has no idea what the endgame of that diplomacy ought to be -- or, in TNR-speak, "That's not clear." As long as we bloviate around the negotiating table, apparently, the magazine will be satisfied. (In this sense, TNR's posture is modeled after Bush's approach to North Korea.)

Then, finally, comes the coup de grace. Now that TNR has dispensed with its empty attempt to discuss what ought to be done about Iraq, it comes to the real question:

(A)s we pore over the lessons of this misadventure, we do not conclude that our past misjudgments warrant a rush into the cold arms of "realism." Realism, yes; but not "realism." American power may not be capable of transforming ancient cultures or deep hatreds, but that fact does not absolve us of the duty to conduct a foreign policy that takes its moral obligations seriously. As we attempt to undo the damage from a war that we never should have started, our moral obligations will not vanish, and neither will our strategic needs.

Please believe me when I say that this makes me want to cry, since I used to love working for TNR. But the magazine is setting itself up for making the same mistake over and over and over again. This is the emptiest of evasions -- a fetishization of "seriousness" without ever actually being serious. In one of my last pieces for them, I wrote that "Faced with a disastrous war, the most important consideration is not 'Were we wrong?' but 'Why were we wrong?' and 'How can we avoid being so wrong in the future?'" I begged TNR during my time there to address these last questions. But now it's dawned on me that my former friends never will.

--Spencer Ackerman [/div>

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Cha Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-16-06 10:01 PM
Response to Original message
1. KNR~ for Spencer Akerman's
"foul weather" critique of tnr War On Iraq stances.
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Jeffersons Ghost Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Thu Nov-16-06 10:58 PM
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2. my heart goes out to you... it reminds me of how I felt the day I decided to leave media...
it was my 3rd interview with ClearChannel... They were serious about hiring me but when I saw the facilities it sickened me... Twenty or so radio stations all in a single building, with no live disc jockeys -- only a few engineers. Who does that serve? When ALL news speaks with a single voice, the small servents of tyranny will be phased out. Free press is important to real Americans. Free speech is important to real Americans. Due process and equality in a court of law is important to real Americans. Liberty and Justice is important to real Americans. When money or mis-guided loyalty becomes more important than what do we have left? What legacy do we leave our children? It's strange how some people have such small minds and no hearts... sad, very sad.
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ProSense Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-17-06 08:40 PM
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3. "Why were we wrong?"
That's worth investigating!
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geek tragedy Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Nov-17-06 08:58 PM
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4. Ackerman was always too sane, rational, and honest
to work for that Marty Peretz rag.
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