The Unknown Hawk -
Neoconservative Guru Sets Sights on Iran
Commentary, William O. Beeman,
Pacific News Service, May 19, 2003
From creative destruction to total war, the guiding beliefs of the most
aggressive foreign policymakers in the Bush administration may originate in the
works of an influential yet rarely seen neoconservative.
Most Americans have never heard of Michael Ledeen,
but if the
A fellow at the conservative American Enterprise Institute, Ledeen
holds a Ph.D. in History and Philosophy from the
Ledeen's ideas are repeated daily by such figures as
Richard Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld and Paul Wolfowitz. His views virtually define the stark departure
from American foreign policy philosophy that existed before the tragedy of
Now Michael Ledeen is calling for regime change
beyond
With a group of other conservatives, Ledeen recently
set up the Center for Democracy in Iran (CDI), an action group focusing on
producing regime change in
Quotes from Ledeen's works reveal a peculiar set of
beliefs about American attitudes toward violence. "Change -- above all
violent change -- is the essence of human history," he proclaims in his
book, Machiavelli on Modern Leadership: Why Machiavelli's Iron Rules Are as
Timely and Important Today as Five Centuries Ago. In an influential essay
in the National Review Online he asserts, "Creative destruction is our
middle name. We do it automatically ... it is time once again to export the
democratic revolution."
Ledeen has become the driving philosophical force
behind the neoconservative movement and the military actions it has spawned.
His 1996 book, Freedom Betrayed; How the
Ledeen's take on this idea is wedded to ideology. In
summarizing his book The War against the Terror Masters on the American
Enterprise Institute web site, he writes: "We wage total war because we
fight in the name of an idea, and ideas either triumph or fail . . .
totally." In his reckoning, force is the only reliable strategy. He
claims, drawing inspiration from Machiavelli: "We can lead by the force of
high moral example . . . [but] fear is much more reliable, and lasts longer.
Once we show that we are capable of dealing out terrible punishment to our
enemies, our power will be far greater."
Consequently, Ledeen has excoriated both the State
Department and the United Nations for their preference for diplomatic solutions
to conflict; and the CIA for equivocating on evidence that would condemn "
"No one I know wants to wage war on
Though he appears on conservative outlets like the Fox television network, Ledeen has not been singled out for much media attention by
the Bush administration, despite his extensive influence in
Clearly a final decision has not been made on whether the
Given both his fervor and his influence over the men with the guns, Americans
should not be surprised if Ledeen's pronouncements
come true.
PNS contributor William O. Beeman (William_beeman@brown.edu) teaches
anthropology and directs
©2003 Pacific
News Service and William O. Beeman. This article may be
freely distributed for any non-commercial purpose. For commercial use, please
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