Breaking NewsDonald TrumpForeign PolicyHistoryiranIsrael-Hamas Warmiddle eastOpinionRussiaUkraine WarWorld Events

A Blinding ‘Realism’ – The Dispatch

Dear Reader (especially those of you who know who the real monster is), 

Longtime readers know that I don’t have a lot of use for “realism” as widely practiced in foreign policy debates. The best working definition of a realist, I often say, is an ideologue who lost an argument. What I mean by that is so-called realists tend to claim that their political opponents—particularly those in power—are letting their ideological commitments blind them to what really needs to be done. “Those guys are ideologues, I’m just a realist” is to foreign policy what “Those guys are ideologues, I’m just a pragmatist” is to domestic policy. 

One of my favorite illustrations of this comes from Pat Buchanan. Perhaps more than any other mainstream figure, Pat pushed the idea that America was too close to Israel. Some of his arguments were standard fair realpolitik and rehashed “beware entangling alliances” boilerplate. Israel is tiny, the Arab world is huge, why side with a hated minority in a region we relied on for oil?  But Pat would press the argument further, suggesting—or asserting—that Jews in America were responsible for our unwise alliance with Israel because they’re a “fifth column” in America with dual loyalties.  Here are a few of many, many examples, as pointed out by the Anti-Defamation League:

Source link

Related Posts

1 of 69