Mark Adomanis

Right-winger foresees end of America

But Mark Steyn's shoddy evidence, confused logic and witty style say more about the conservative psyche

Mark Steyn

In his new book, “After America: Get Ready for Armageddon,” conservative provocateur Mark Steyn takes direct aim at the dogma of “American exceptionalism,” an ideological framework that now plays a role in American conservatism roughly equivalent to that which Marxism-Leninism played in the Soviet Union (everything that happens supports it, and nothing that happens can disprove it). Refreshingly, Steyn evidences little patience for the idea that America is unique in some fundamental and eternal sense. As he writes in the introduction:

“The United States joined the rest of the cosseted Western world in voting itself a lifestyle it was not willing to pay for … the ‘bubble’ is not the property market or cheap credit. The bubble is twenty-first century America itself, from the financial sector to a wretched education system culminating in languorous, undemanding ‘college’ courses whose absurd soaraway prices were affected not a jot by the economic downturn.”

Indeed, if Steyn’s book has a unifying theme amid its many digressions and tangents, it’s that America, due to pervasive mismanagement and fecklessness, is headed for a major decline in power and influence. Compared to some of the magical thinking about America’s role in the world that characterizes today’s intellectual right — Charles Krauthammer, for example, once gave a speech whose thesis was that “decline is a choice” — Steyn’s is admirably realistic about America’s declining influence, and some of his predictions (he’ll surely be appalled to learn) actually mimic those of many leading progressives.

But the larger picture that Steyn paints is confused and internally inconsistent to such an extreme extent that it’s not clear he actually means any of “After America” to be taken seriously. Steyn, a prolific and witty writer, is a prime example of the extent to which contemporary conservative commentary generates negative value added.

“Negative value added” is a somewhat esoteric economic concept I became familiar with in graduate school. In the wake of the Soviet collapse, Boris Yeltsin and his advisors set out on a course of economic “shock therapy.” It was hoped that the moribund economy would be “shocked” back to life by the rapid introduction of market prices. However, since Soviet industrial firms had never operated in an environment of market prices and had instead received unaffordably lavish state subsidies, almost all of their manufacturing techniques were hopelessly inefficient. Some firms, in fact, were so epically mismanaged and horrifically uncompetitive that they generated negative value added; the sum total of their activity and efforts actually subtracted value from the raw materials they used as inputs.

So although his demolition of the claptrap of “American exceptionalism” is most welcome, Steyn’s parallel attempts to prove that “statism” is the source of all of the world’s problems (from increasing obesity to stagnating median wages) and that the Islamic world, particularly Iran, is ready to run roughshod over an effeminate and degenerate West, relies on such a tendentious and selective presentation of facts that it actually winds up subtracting from his readers’ understanding of what is actually going on in the world.

According to Steyn, Europe is in a demographic death spiral caused by statism and, at a deeper level, the loss of religious belief and “civilization confidence.” Iran, on the other hand, is on the fast track to becoming the dominant power in the Middle East.

Yes, in reality, in 2009, Iran’s fertility rate, which Steyn uses as a heuristic for a society’s overall health, was actually lower than that of Brazil (barely mentioned in “After America”), the United States (doomed, according to Steyn), France (even more doomed, according to Steyn), or the United Kingdom (which is well and truly f*****). If an Islamic revolution and the full-fledged implementation of hardcore Shariah enforced by “morality police” can’t keep Iran’s fertility rate from rapidly collapsing, perhaps the “problem” of declining fertility is actually better explained by the basic pressures of modernity than by the craven adoption of liberalism.

Consider the experience of Muslim countries like Morocco, Algeria and Tunisia. Despite not being “liberal” in any recognizable sense of the word (indeed, being almost the exact opposite of the coddling social-democratic “nanny states” that Steyn blames for the West’s decline), these countries all experienced sustained and rapid decrease in fertility over the past 20 years. Today, according to the CIA World Factbook, Tunisia and Algeria are below replacement rate (the number of children required to keep a population at a constant level) and several other Muslim-majority countries are right on the cusp. Steyn avoids the problems these facts present for his thesis through the simple and effective tactic of not mentioning them.

Steyn’s knowledge of demographics is remarkably confused. In the concluding chapter, for example, he argues that “much of America is now in need of an equivalent to … post-Soviet Eastern Europe’s economic liberalization in the early nineties.”

He seems unaware that fertility rates collapsed during Eastern Europe’s experiment with economic liberalization. Indeed, not a single post-communist Eastern European country has yet regained the level of fertility it had at the time of communism’s collapse:  Once again, Steyn avoids the problems this presents for his thesis by simply leaving it unmentioned.

What I take away from Steyn’s sincere but confused attempt at comparative demographics is the following: He confidently predicts the future supremacy of countries (Iran) that are doomed according to metrics of his own choosing (the total fertility rate) while simultaneously making policy prescriptions (radical economic liberalization) that, when implemented in other countries, have had the effect of exacerbating the trend (decreasing fertility) he’s attempting to reverse.

Steyn has a habit of rapidly alternating between reasonable observation and fact-free raving,  making it one of the more disorienting book I’ve ever read. To take one example among the dozens scattered throughout the book, let’s look at what Steyn has to say about the role of the “Anglosphere” during the Second World War:

The Usual rap against the Security Council is that it’s the Second World War victory parade preserved in aspic, but, if that were so, Canada would have a greater claim to a permanent seat than either France or China. The reason Ottawa didn’t make the cut is because a third anglophone nation and second realm of King George VI would have made too obvious a simple truth: that, when it mattered, the Anglosphere was the all but lone defender of civilization and liberty.

There is so much that is wrong with this paragraph it’s hard to know where to start. First of all, China started fighting the war in 1937, a full two years before the British Empire became involved, which means that the Chinese actually fought the longest of all the allied belligerents. Additionally, in comparison to the Canadians, the Chinese suffered casualties on an entirely different order of magnitude: Roughly 50,000 Canadian soldiers died in the war in comparison to somewhere between 3 million and 4 million Chinese soldiers and another 10 or so million civilians.

More important than the sheer number of casualties, though, was the fact that stubborn Chinese resistance and unrelenting guerrilla warfare forced the Japanese to keep massive quantities of men and materiel in China (at times more than half of the entire imperial army), forces that could otherwise have been used to attempt to stymie the Americans and resulted in far greater losses. To suggest that Canada deserved a seat on the postwar Security Council more than China is not a serious argument, and can only be made with the, seemingly deliberate, omission of a number of important facts.

Steyn presents a depressing account of the steady erosion of American liberty that keeps a laser-like focus on the petty indignities of modern life. Is it ideal that in 21st century America you need to get a large number of permits before opening a small business? No, I suppose it’s not. Some licensing and regulatory requirements make no rational sense. But you know what’s a lot worse than waiting in line at city hall for permits? Being exposed to pervasive terrorism and mob violence, while simultaneously and systematically being excluded from all public institutions, simply because of the color of your skin. That was the lived reality of tens of millions of African-Americans over the course of many decades. The abolition of Jim Crow is just one of the massive and noteworthy advances for human freedom and dignity that are entirely and utterly absent from Steyn’s account.

The rapid and commendable progress achieved by women, gays and minorities has no place in “After America” because of Steyn’s quite remarkable ability to ignore the perspectives of the various “others” who haunt the pages of his book. Consider his pithy formulation:

“After the slaughter of 9/11, the civilized world fought back, hit hard, went on the attack, rolled up the Afghan terrorist camps, toppled the Taliban. In the battle cry of a soon forgotten man called Todd Beamer, ‘Let’s roll!’

After the Danish Cartoons, we weaseled and equivocated and appeased and apologized, and signaled that we were willing to trade core Western values for a quiet life. Let’s roll over! It’s a lot less effort.”

The Danish cartoon controversy took place early in the fall of 2005. During the next six years, supposedly a period of rank appeasement and cowardice, the United States continued to militarily occupy two Muslim countries it had recently invaded (Iraq and Afghanistan), bombed four others (Somalia, Libya, Pakistan and Yemen), placed “crippling” economic sanctions on yet another (Iran), and ran a worldwide torture regime in close cooperation with the intelligence services of various “pro-Western” dictators such as the reviled, and now deposed, Hosni Mubarak, Moammar Gadhafi and Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

Steyn simply doesn’t even attempt to rebut the rather obvious counterargument that the United States and its allies are detested by large number of Muslims not for their “freedom” but for their habit of militarily intervening in various Muslim countries and closely supporting unpopular pro-Western dictators.

Far from being a weakness, though, Steyn’s myopia is what makes him a far better weaver of narratives than many America conservatives. Steyn’s wit and pen are sharp, but it is his utter lack of interest in either doing justice to the alternate liberal explanation, or in placing his observations inside any sort of broader context, that gives his prose its power and rhythm.

Yet while it is an entertaining read, as a practical guide to understanding the world, “After America” is so tendentious and selective as to be value subtracting — people who read it will end up with an extremely distorted view of a number of important topics, and will imagine that “the government” is some sort of almost supernatural and constantly growing malevolent force.

However, as a window into the mind-set of the contemporary right (equal parts resentful, angry, confused and uninformed), it is invaluable. If you want to understand the viewpoint of those Americans — primarily, but not exclusively, older whites — who are angry with where the country is headed, you could do quite a lot worse than read this book. 

Did the Russians bomb a U.S. embassy?

All the flaws of the American media are once again on display in the bizarre story about a bombing in Georgia

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev (L) and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin talk after a remembrance ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Moscow, June 22, 2011. Russia marks on Wednesday the 70th anniversary of the start of the Soviet war against Nazi Germany, known to Russians as "The Great Patriotic war". REUTERS/Dennis Sinyakov (RUSSIA - Tags: ANNIVERSARY CONFLICT POLITICS)(Credit: © Denis Sinyakov / Reuters)

Eli Lake, a Washington Times reporter and one of the most prominent right-wing voices on foreign policy and “security” issues, and someone who has in the past called me an “illiterate child,” has published over the past several weeks a number of articles alleging that the Russians were responsible for an utterly bizarre (and thankfully botched) attempt at bombing the US embassy in Tblisi back in September 2010. Media reports have differed on the precise specifics, but there is general agreement that a small bomb (about a kilogram of TNT) exploded, and another was defused, about a hundred meters away from the external wall of the US embassy.

Lake’s first article, published on July 27, is titled “Classified report: Russia tied to blast at U.S. embassy” and confidently asserts that Russian guilt has been proven by the US intelligence community. The central argument of the article is the following:

The highly classified report about the Sept. 22 incident was described to The Washington Times by two U.S. officials who have read it. They said the report supports the findings of the Georgian Interior Ministry, which traced the bombing to a Russian military intelligence office. “It is written without hedges, and it confirms the Georgian account,” said one U.S. official familiar with the report. This official added that it specifically says the Russian military intelligence, or GRU, coordinated the bombings.

Well, that sounds pretty open and shut, right? Intelligence reports “without hedges” are rarer than democratic politicians with backbones, so there seems to be little left to do other than alert Moscow that we’re sending in the marines. Lake’s reporting suggests no hints of any disagreement within the US intelligence community, nor does it suggest any alternate possibilities. There is simply conclusive and incontrovertible proof that not only did a Russian military intelligence officer carry out the bombings in question, but, most crucially of all, that he did so under direct orders from his superiors.

Now I am not overly alarmist, but if this were actually the case, if the highest levels of Russian military intelligence have been conclusively proven to be reckless and irresponsible to such a degree that they thought it would be a good idea to place bombs near a US embassy it would be truly terrifying. Indeed if Russia was really that malevolent and aggressively anti-American, if its high-level intelligence professionals thought nothing of trying to bomb a US embassy (which is, of course, an act of war), it would be the most dramatic threat to US security in decades, a threat on an entirely different order of magnitude than the puny bands of al-Qaida fighters our freedom drones are constantly incinerating throughout the Hindu Kush.

Unlike Iraq, Iran, Syria, Libya, or whichever other “rogue state” is the most recent to be accused of developing WMDs, Russia unquestionably has them in large quantities. Indeed the Russian Federation has more than enough strategic and tactical nuclear weapons to destroy all life on the planet several times over, and it has the delivery vehicles to get those warheads anywhere in the world within an hour. And while its conventional military forces are rusting and obsolescent, Russia has intelligence services and spy networks that, while they have arguably fallen on hard times as of late have generally earned a fearsome reputation and are known worldwide for their cunning, efficacy, and ruthlessness.

Compared to the pathetic efforts of al-Qaida and similar organizations to gain access to classified US information or to penetrate the intelligence apparatus, the Russians have proven highly competent at getting agents inside both US and allied Western governments. As just one recent example, the Russians successfully placed a spy at the highest levels of the Estonian Defense ministry and, through him, were able to gain access to thousands of pages of highly classified NATO documents.

All of this is to say that if the Russians have really lost their marbles, if they’ve decided to go all-in on confrontation, ordered their agents to cavalierly go about bombing US embassies, and essentially started a new cold war, then we’re in for some really serious trouble because the FSB is a heck of a lot more organized, flexible, and formidable than al-Qaida. And if the American public was willing to accede to the Patriot Act, one’s mind reels at the sorts of civil-liberties-crushing legislation to which they would assent if they were convinced that Vladimir Putin and his evil henchmen were minutes away from invading.

However, Lake’s second article, “Russia Uses Dirty Tricks Despite US Reset,” published a week later on August 4, adds a few details which, to put it exceedingly mildly, complicate things. Unlike the first article which asserted that there was no doubt whatsoever about the involvement of Russian officialdom in the bombing, this article includes a piece of information whose importance is hard to exaggerate:

The CIA concluded that Mr. Borisov was acting on orders from Russian military intelligence headquarters, according to these officials. The State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research assessed that Mr. Borisov was acting as a rogue agent, these officials said.

The single sentence I bolded, which appears more than half-way through Lake’s second story, shows that the US government’s own intelligence agencies can’t even agree on the most crucial question: Was Borisov following orders, or did he act alone? Whatever happened to “without hedges?” Does the fact that another US intelligence agency thinks differently no longer count as a hedge? The fact that the State Department does not think that Borisov was following orders totally negates the most sensational and hard-hitting finding of the earlier story from July 27, a story that was, predictably, bandied about in the conservative blogosphere as evidence of Obama’s cowardice and pusillanimity, the utter failure of the reset, and the essential evilness of the Russian regime.

The basic disagreement between the CIA and the State Department on the most important aspect of the entire episode should be a giant red flag to a journalist, and would lead any minimally inquisitive person to ask a number of questions such as: Since Borisov is not in Georgian custody, what is the nature of the evidence that so conclusively proves he was acting under orders? Videotapes? Audio recordings? A confession from a co-conspirator? And if this evidence from the Georgians is so overwhelming and straightforward, why can’t the State Department and the CIA agree on its interpretation? What specifically led the CIA to attribute Borisov’s activity to the GRU, and what specifically led the State Department to attribute it to a rogue operative? Has the disagreement between the CIA and State occurred from the start, or is it a more recent development? And, at a higher level, what possible motivation would the Russians have to take the almost unbelievably provocative action of bombing a US embassy? And, finally, why would they do this at a time when, by all accounts, their relations with Washington were improving?

But even if those questions are somehow off-limits, anyone with a passing knowledge of the last decade of US history, much less a journalist whose job is to cover the security and foreign policy community, would know that, in a situation where the US government can’t even get its intelligence agencies to agree on basic facts, the most prudent course of action is to wait for more information. How is that the least bit controversial? Am I the only person who remembers the lead up to the Iraq war and the titanic failures at virtually every level of the US government, or is it somehow in bad taste, evidence of a lack of patriotism or a disposition towards “appeasement,” to note that our intelligence community really doesn’t have a very good track record on these sorts of things? Before scuttling relations with the country that possesses the world’s largest nuclear arsenal, as would be the only responsible course of action if the Russian government really did try to bomb one of our embassies, is it really so much to ask that our various super-secret-spy agencies come to a basic agreement on arcane and esoteric topics such as, “Did the Russian government actually order the bombing in Tbilisi?”

Of course, the lack of information, and the pervasiveness of classification, is precisely the problem. The US government so routinely classifies such vast troves of information that a great deal of what is first reported as “fact” is later revealed to be little more than unsupported gossip and innuendo. As an American citizen I would like to think that if my country’s sovereign territory has been attacked by the Russian government, I can actually look at the evidence and weigh it for myself and not simply rely on a few snippets of information that has been “leaked” by anonymous “experts” within the intelligence community to a reporter from the Washington Times. To put it more straightforwardly: the consequences of Lake’s allegations are so serious, and have such startling implications, that all of the information about them ought to become part of the public domain.

It should go without saying that none of this suggests that the Russians are angels. It is a dreary thing to have to repeat, but pointing out that specific allegation X about a nasty foreign government might not be true does not mean that one supports, or is positively predisposed to, that foreign government. I’m virtually positive that someone will call me a “Putin apologist” for pointing out that Lake’s interpretation of the bombing makes very little logical sense. Furthermore, given the facts of the matter, even the most favorable interpretation of the evidence suggests that, at an absolute minimum, a relatively senior Russian military intelligence officer went rogue and exploded a bomb next to a US embassy. That is an extremely serious development, and I am not laughing it off.

However, if, as seems likely to me, Borisov was a lone wolf, the interpretation of events is precisely the opposite of what Lake and the rest of the conservative establishment seem to be suggesting. That is, Russia is not ruled by omnipotent evil geniuses who have embarked on a far reaching plan to enslave the freedom loving people of Georgia and destroy US influence in the Caucasus, nor is it run by lunatics who think nothing of lobbing a few kilograms of TNT at a US embassy. Rather, Russia is a relatively ramshackle country with the GDP per-capita of Mexico that cannot even maintain full control over its own intelligence operatives. That is not “good,” but it obviously calls for a very different set of policy response and a very different order of priorities.

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