From the Libertarian Party of California: www.ca.lp.org

Iraq War Conservative Skepticism
Tibor R. Machan

Since the first talk of invading Iraq, it has been my view that doing so was a bad idea, in conflict with the principles of the foreign and military policy of a free society. I ended my first column against the war on September 9, 2002, as follows:

"Perhaps Iraq needs to be moved on and fast, to stop Saddam Hussein from destroying us and our friends abroad. Perhaps some people do have the needed information that would justify such a preemptive retaliation.

"But with all the evidence showing the lack of credibility of the U.S. government in so many matters, and the evasion of the process of getting Congressional authorization, how can someone support a mission that involves such serious risks as a war does?"

Later I kept reiterating my skepticism, based mainly on the idea that the government of a free country exists to secure the rights of its citizens, not to solve problems abroad, unless some carefully drawn treaty has been entered into that requires getting involved there.

Slowly but surely, many who initially supported the war have joined me in this view, and by now many conservatives, including Senator Chuck Hegel and William F. Buckley, Jr., have gone on record opposing President George W. Bush in his refusal to relinquish his irrational objective of building a functional constitutional democracy in Iraq. These are not a bunch of America-hating leftists. They are men and women who came to realize that there is no rational justification for America to be fighting this completely mad war, a war against an enemy that amounts to, as I recently put it, a deadly heavy fog with no clearly identifiable substance that could be construed as a disposal enemy.

I admit that my opposition to the war has been what some folks call "ideological"—in that tone that has surrounded this term ever since Karl Marx made it into something insidious. (An ideology, for Marx, was a simplistic rationalization for the ruling class's efforts to make its exploitation of the people seem acceptable.) What, in fact, has guided my thinking is the plain, unambiguous wording in the Declaration of Independence about the purpose of government in a country that is founded on the idea that human beings have unalienable rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

If this is a sound idea—and it is eminently sound, in comparison to other ideas on which political regimes are founded—then government is akin to a bodyguard one may hire to provide one with proper protection against aggression from others. The bodyguard isn't supposed to go around looking for other people who may need help. The job is to protect the clients, and the clients of the government and military of the United States of America are its citizens.

Sure, sophists among us may scoff at this view as being simplistic, but basic principles are supposed to be clear, unambiguous, and understandable by all to whom they apply, whose conduct they are supposed to guide. The complexities, and there will be plenty when those principles are applied in concrete situations, need to be worked, out but never at the expense of those basics.

For this reason slogans—which are, in fact, sound, clearly articulated principles—such as Benjamin Franklin's observation that "Those who would sacrifice liberty for security deserve neither" have been my guiding ideas, and all the talk about pragmatism and how the world is too messy to stick it out with principled policies, has never deterred me from my stance.

It is somewhat gratifying that early Bush loyalists are beginning to appreciate this viewpoint, although it's likely that it comes too late for all those who were sacrificed on the altar of hubris. But then, it has now become clear that the American government, be it under the administration of Democrats or Republicans, would not recognize a principle such as those laid out by the American founders if it came up to them and bit them in the face.



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