Spain Is The New France 11-M, as the
Spanish have named the Madrid train bombings (and who else should name
them?), was in many ways almost eagerly anticipated by opinion peddlers,
maunderers,
and litterers.
Benumbed by the prospect of eight more months of fact-checking Lee
Atwaters posthumous exhalations, charges of appeasement flew
fast and furious as hawks both neo- and paleo- remembered what they loved
about the war as a campaign issue: its clarity.
Krauthammer declared
Spain "decadent," and the wags at The Corner vied with Charles Johnson
to be the first to lead a post with the Spanish translation of "surrender
monkeys."
As handy an analogy as Munich
is, it doesnt really apply (if indeed it ever did).
As Krauthammer points out, no one could seriously believe that ejecting Aznars
party would reduce Spains risk of attack from Al Qaeda. The corrolary of
this principle is that no one should seriously believe that re-electing the Popular
Party would increase Al Qaedas desire to attack Spain; everything we know about
Al Qaeda suggests that we are simply props in their internal fantasy, and modifying our
policies in the hope that we can deter or discomfit Al Qaeda is to engage in
psychological shadow boxing with an invisible shadow. Might it then be more
plausible to assume that the Spanish voters were motivated by factors other than how
their nation figures in the dramatic narratives of either Osama bin Laden or George W.
Bush? Particularly when you consider the reports the
Socialists were gaining on the PP prior to 11-M, and that Spaniards themselves
stated that a chief motive for their rejection of the PP was that they didnt
appreciate being deceived
on the eve of an election. This is what really alarms Bushs supporters:
the refusal by an elecorate to see everything through the lens of the "war on
terror."
Kevin Drum asks:
how does it serve Bush-supporters interests to breezily generalize this single
electoral result into a trend threatening to alienate all of Bushs
European allies? Perhaps the recent Wonkette-driven Punking
of the Bush re-election site unintentionally (?) handed Rove the campaigns new
theme: "Bush-Cheney '04: Thrown Out of More European Countries Than the
Visigoths." (Sat 20 Mar 2004, 14.21 PST)
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