Glenn Greenwald: The "father of modern conservatism"
The split between Buckley and the Bush-led right was perhaps most vivid when it came to the war in Iraq, the defining belief of today's conservative movement. In December 2005, Democratic National Committee chairman Howard Dean generated intense outrage on the right when he compared the Iraq war to Vietnam and said: the"idea that we're going to win the war in Iraq is an idea which is just plain wrong." That statement produced limitless recriminations from conservatives, with Michael Reagan, son of the former president, actually calling for Dean's hanging as a traitor as a result of Dean's statements:"Howard Dean should be arrested and hung for treason or put in a hole until the end of the Iraq war!" But Buckley, a mere eight weeks later, echoed Dean's comments almost verbatim while writing about the war in National Review:"One can't doubt that the American objective in Iraq has failed," Buckley declared."Our mission has failed because Iraqi animosities have proved uncontainable by an invading army of 130,000 Americans." He urged the Bush administration to consider"acknowledgment of defeat." In an earlier November 2005 interview with the Wall Street Journal -- on almost the same exact day Dean made his comments -- Buckley went even further, declaring that the invasion of Iraq was"anything but conservative." Buckley explicitly distinguished the conservatism he founded from what it had become under the Bush-led Republican Party. In July 2006, he told CBS Evening News that"Mr. Bush faces a singular problem best defined, I think, as the absence of effective conservative ideology." And he specifically identified the war in Iraq as a major cause of the nation's problems, arguing that the war was such a failure that it had single-handedly rendered the Bush presidency a failure:"If you had a European prime minister who experienced what we've experienced it would be expected that he would retire or resign."
On one key issue after the next, Buckley came to reject the defining principles of today's conservative movement. In the same CBS interview, he rejected the neoconservative approach of belligerence toward Iran and, more generally, labeled as"too ambitious" the sweeping vision of democracy promotion set out by Bush in his second Inaugural Address. In a subsequent interview, Buckley warned:"The neoconservative hubris, which sort of assigns to America some kind of geo-strategic responsibility for maximizing democracy, overstretches the resources of a free country.''
New Republic writer Johann Hari went undercover on a National Review cruise in 2006 and detailed a bitter argument that broke out between Buckley and neoconservative icon Norman Podhoretz. After listening to the two right-wing elders bicker on virtually every foreign policy issue, Hari concluded:"Podhoretz and Buckley now inhabit opposite poles of post-September 11 American conservatism."
Nonetheless, there is no question that the bulk of adherents to the conservative movement that Buckley founded now side with Podhoretz, not with Buckley. As Hari reported, the crowd cheered loudly for Podhoretz, and not for Buckley. One of the National Review cruise member seated at Hari's table scoffed that Buckley's refusal to fight Muslim terrorists made him a" coward," while his wife dismissed Buckley as nothing more than an"old man," and then"tapped her head with her finger to suggest dementia." Indeed, while the allegedly epic and all-consuming nature of the so-called war on terrorism has become the central, overarching theme of Bush-era conservatism, as well as of the magazine he founded, Buckley was clearly uncomfortable with, even hostile to, such a grandiose vision of this conflict. When asked by the WSJ whether this"war" was comparable to the"long twilight struggle" of the Cold War -- the ideological battle that was Buckley's bread and butter -- he refused the comparison, dismissing away the threat posed by Muslim radicals on the ground that they"lack the resources" to truly threaten the U.S.
Although the postmortem iconography of Buckley as the Ultimate Conservative will attempt to obscure these developments, it became an increasing source of embarrassment and discomfort that the political movement of which he is deemed to be the"father," and even the magazine he founded, came to bear so little resemblance either to Buckley's style or substance....