Bad Assumptions Lead To Bad Policies
By Daniel Greenfield
SultanKnish.Blogspot.com
What is so terribly interesting about bad
governments is that they are as self-deceiving as
they are deceptive. The straightforward clarity of
Orwell's Oceania with its apparatchiks who knew
exactly what the system was about and how evil it
was, is woefully lacking in our own apparatchiks who
assemble the most ridiculous plans out of the tissue
paper of their own consensus and then goggle when it
all comes apart on them. Whatever evil they harbor
within themselves is outdone time and time again by
their own stupidity.
Libya is a case in point. We are now loosely
involved in a civil war in Libya on the side of the
losing side. An engagement engineered by the
brightest leaders the West had to offer. Forget
dullards like Bush, Blair and Chirac-- the new
generation weren't going to let themselves get
caught out that way. These were sharp men, brainy
boys who had gone to the right schools, Harvard,
Oxford, Sciences Po. Surely they could draw on the
lessons of history.
The Western elite rushed out of their ivory towers
to cheer on what they dubbed the 'Arab Spring', but
it was a false spring. Its proper historical
placement was not with the revolutions of 1848, but
the Egyptian and Iraqi coups of 1952 and 1958. The
decline of British and French colonial influence
toppled Middle Eastern monarchies. The fall of
American influence, combined with the malign power
of the left, engineered the overthrow of
pro-American governments in Egypt and Tunisia, as it
had in Iran. There is no Arab Spring, only a Muslim
Winter.
Western elites have been patting the Muslim world on
the head, whispering soothing praises in its ears
and hoping that it will reform and turn their lies
into truths. And in their minds, to "reform" means
to become like them. To adopt their system of
government and their way of life. So it has been an
article of faith that the trouble of the Muslim
world is not religious, but political. Not Islam,
but dictatorships. Open up the voting booths and
every pile of rubble occupied by Bedouin barbarians
with 7th century mores and 20th century weapons will
become just like Norway. Democracy will save Muslims
from themselves. And save us from them too.
So bad assumptions lead to bad policy. Western
governments rushed to treat every large group of
protesters as the will of the people. Chants and
slogans took the place of the voting booth. Only the
Saudis with their tanks in Bahrain got an exemption
from the clause thanks to their snakelike grip on
the foreign policy apparatus of their best
customers. Ali and Mubarak had to go. Now the
Islamists are tipped to take power in two of the
formerly more stable parts of North Africa. Another
great victory for democracy, which leaves out
everyone who isn't a Muslim male.
And then there's Gaddafi, a lunatic with the worst
army in the region, who refuses to go. And a
scattered army of rebels comprising everyone from
former regime thugs to Al-Qaeda. With a No Fly Zone
turning into a trickle of military advisers for an
intervening in a civil war-- the chief casualty of
Libya has been history. Once again we know whom
we're fighting against, but we don't know whom we're
fighting for. Democracy is a great slogan, but short
on details. And ideology is a poor substitute for
strategy.
The functional execution of a moral imperative with
real world strategies leads to moral compromises. We
set out to save the women of Afghanistan from the
Taliban, by subjecting them to the milder version of
local laws, which still use rape as punishment,
excuses honor killing, imprisons teenage girls who
flee their husbands and far worse. We came to
DeBaathify Iraq, only to be forced to ally with the
Baath party anyway, because the Shiites and Al-Qaeda
proved to be even worse.
Each time we are told that we are allying with the
'good guys' against the 'bad guys', what actually
happens is that in the end we ally with whoever
isn't shooting at us, against whoever is. Like it or
not, that's exactly what became of our moral
imperatives in Afghanistan and Iraq. It's already
happening in Libya where we keep bombing rebel
positions through some disastrous confluence of poor
intelligence and rebel hostility. Put troops on the
ground and they'll be shot at by both sides. Remove
Gaddafi and you will create chaos that will force us
to cobble together another coalition of the
'Currently Least Hostile' as we have tried to do in
Iraq and Afghanistan.
How could we stumble into the same mess over and
over again? Bad assumptions lead to bad policy.
Unless the assumptions get a spring cleaning, the
same mistakes will keep on happening over and over
again.
If you assume that a moral policy (by your lights)
must also be a successful one, then you will keep
presiding over disasters until you learn otherwise.
Take our economic policy. It is an article of
faith among liberals that conservative spending is
bad economic policy and liberal spending is good
economic policy. And vice versa. These articles of
faith exist entirely apart from economic realities.
Liberals discover deficits under conservative
governments, and conservatives discover deficits
under liberal governments. A change of government
makes the fiscal hawks coo like doves. Now the New
York Times and The Nation claim that deficits are a
myth. Why? Because they interfere with their policy
agenda.
We live in a strange political universe in which the
existence of objective realities is treated as
subjective for political reasons. Deficits, WMD's
and Islamic Terrorism have become political
Schrodinger's cats. Their reality dependent on the
observer. Is there a cat in the box? We can't know.
Are we in an economic crisis? You could get a
subjective answer from an ordinary citizen based on
his own experiences, or a political answer from a
wonk, but getting an objective answer has become
nearly impossible. And without objective
policymaking, all policies are bad policies.
Political policymaking treats every crisis as an
opportunity. The solution to every problem is the
policy agenda of one side or the other, not a
solution that derives from the nature of the problem
undertaken with an awareness of the consequences.
By defining the problem in relation to the policy
agenda, which is defined in terms of a political
worldview, we rarely get at the actual problem.
Instead we perpetuate the same policies over and
over again. To understand why is to understand why
we think the way that we do.
To posit that the great difficulty of the Muslim
world is its lack of democracy, is to believe that
democracy is what makes 'us better than them', and
that by passing on this form of government to our
distant relations across the Med, we can resolve
their social and cultural problems. But democracy is
decentralized decision making. And the EU may
champion democracy in the Middle East, but it
invariably opposes it at home. Decentralizing power
relationships and decision making in authoritarian
cultures does not lead to a better order, but to a
more chaotic and fragile one.
Liberal conservatives invariably seize on the
democracy theme, because they strive for a civic
culture. The left seizes on popular protests against
American backed leaders with equal zeal, because in
their worldview, America and the West are the sum of
everything that is wrong with the world. The Western
enthusiasm for the Arab revolts are a Frankenstein
merger of these two memes that appear compatible
from a distance, but come apart on close
examination.
Liberal conservatives think that civic participation
can save the Muslim world, not because it can, but
because they it can save the West. The left thinks
that everyone should be living under a People's
Dictatorship run by disgruntled university grads
like themselves. Neither has much of a clue about
the Muslim world. They simply apply their domestic
attitudes globally. Post-Communist Russia and China
baffle them, but do not stymie them. Instead they
march blindly onward to the next stupid conclusion.
Economically we are caught between a left that
thinks socialism is never bad economic policy and a
right that thinks capitalism is never bad national
policy. The debate now comes down to the right
pressing for cuts in the left's sacred cows, and the
left offering to cut the right's sacred cows
instead. So far we have cut funding for the border
fence and the military. Considering the cost of
illegal immigration, the former is as clear cut a
case of penny wise and pound foolish as there ever
was in government. The tug of war is raising
important questions about the sustainability of
unlimited government spending, but the debates over
social services spending are almost a sideshow. The
real problems have always been structural. The
problem is not how much we are spending, but that we
have a system built on spending, in both the public
and private sectors.
Right now we are trying to cut an alcoholic's
booze supply by 10 percent, in order to one day cut
it by 40 percent. But the problem isn't the total
booze intake, it is that the alcoholic is addicted
to drinking. Take away his Jack Daniels and he'll
drink antifreeze. It's not the total or the
percentage that's the issue, but the state of mind.
Our corporations are just as irresponsible and
incapable of long term vision as the socialists. It
wasn't the socialists alone who carved up American
industry and business. Just as often it was Wall
Street and the CEO's who cared only about the next
quarter, not the next century, let alone about their
own country. This isn't a struggle between socialism
and capitalism. Our leading capitalists are the
biggest proponents of socialism. And socialists sit
on the boards of corporations.
Our culture has ceased to think in the long term.
The intersection between action and outcome is
filled with political jargon. We have become great
communicators and terrible implementers. The same
bad assumptions keep leading to bad policies, that
are critiqued and revisited each time because the
mindset that leads to them has not been fixed. We
fight wars and bankrupt ourselves without ever
admitting what we are doing. Only after the deed is
done do we acknowledge it, and then repeat it again.
Until we change how we think, the same mistakes will
keep happening over and over again.