< FIRST PAGE
2 OF 9 CONTINUE >

The Iraq Gamble

(Continued...)

GETTING RICH BY BEING WRONG
Tom Friedman

images/2007/01/tom-friedman-02-72840442.jpg
WAR PROFITEER Friedman

Pre-war position: Re-reading Friedman's columns from the six months or so prior to the invasion of Iraq can induce vertigo. Unlike many of his hawkish colleagues, he grokked all the vital details of the situation. He understood that there were alternatives to war ("Bottom line: Iraq is a war of choice"). He understood that the WMD casus belli was for the most part a convenient line (cautioning that it was merely the "stated reason" for the war, and early on calling out Bush and Blair for "hyping" the evidence). He took a shine to the idea of regime change, but seemed clear-sighted about its low chances for success ("Setting up the first progressive Arab state ... would be a huge undertaking, though, and maybe impossible, given Iraq's fractious history"). He grasped that the consequences of failure would be dizzying ("if done wrong, the world will never be the same") and that to succeed, at the very least, would require exceedingly deft execution on the diplomatic front as well as the military one. Yet he also noted that the Bush Administration was incompetent in at least the former respect, and recognized them as essentially a bunch of pathologically insensitive and hyperaggressive bumblers ("we are talking about nation-building ... [and] the Bushies seem much more adept at breaking things than building things").

So even a Webelo-grade logician knows where to go from here, right? You connect the dots and conclude that while it would be very nice to get rid of Saddam, it would also be stupid and dangerous.

But somehow he still managed to come out in favor of the war. And if the whole thing weren't so tragically misguided, his reasoning would be worth a chuckle. Says Friedman: "something in Mr. Bush's audacious shake of the dice appeals to me." A nice ballsy gamble of a war. Sure, it could throw the region into chaos, bankrupt this country, and dye the fertile crescent red with the blood of civilians; yet an audacious war is like a red lollipop—who isn't powerless to resist it?

Career status: On top of the world. Before the war he was charging less than $40,000 to give a speech; these days it's a rumored $65,000. And afterward the audiences are encouraged to scoop up copies of The World is Flat, his paean to corporate globalism that has been on the Times best-seller list for 91 weeks—the royalties of which certainly help to defray the cost of a $9.3 million mansion in Bethesda.

Friedman was feted by Queen Elizabeth in 2004, and also received a lifetime award from the Overseas Press Club. Though he was probably the most influential pro-war voice in the American media, he still hasn't had to own up to his mistake. If you ask him about it—as Don Imus did recently—he quotes a few misgivings from his columns to demonstrate that he was quite aware the war could be a fiasco and a bloodbath. But let no one say it wasn't audacious.

<< First Page

2 OF 9 Continue >>



< BACK TO Features

 


Sexual Politics
Election 2008 hasn't just been dirty, it's been downright smutty

Full Court Press
Bill Kristol, Jane Mayer, and the rest of this week's winners and sinners

Adult Friends Forever
With more than 30 million users, Adult FriendFinder is the Web's No. 1 meat market. But what kinds of kinksters actually use the site? Radar signed up to find out

Full Court Press
Charles Kaiser on the final presidential debate

Snort Selling
Radar's investment guide to cocaine, hookers, and other vices



Email us at:
tips@radaronline.com
or IM: TipRadar







Meanwhile, the First Best Picture Is...

Heidi Chimes In

Bale's Oscar Pick? Take A Guess

SOS: Rihanna Gets Sued

Liberace's Ex-Love Behind Bars

Love Clean With Bean

Pattinson Lost In Vampire Role

Spencer Fires Back

Star Likes His Gay Friends, But...

Victoria's Secret Facebook Page





Opie Taylor for Obama
Richie Cunningham too

Sarah Meets Woody
The perfect romantic comedy for purple states

McCain Left On Campaign Bus Overnight
From The Onion News Network

Terry Tate: Reading Is Fundamental
He's back!

O'Reilly vs. Frank, Round 2
Barney Frank enters the no spin zone, again!