Instability In
his column at
Slate, Christopher Hitchens takes on the unpleasant task of trying to distinguish the
principles behind his support of the invasion of Iraq, now that the role of
"little gargoyle" and Hitchens-nemesis Henry Kissinger in forming
Bushs Iraq policy has been revealed. In so doing, Hitchens takes
Kissinger (and his fellow-travelers in the "realist" camp of
Iraq war skeptics) for being overly concerned with avoiding "instability."
The "instability" resulting from the invasion of Iraq that most
worried me (and, I imagine, many others excluding, tragically, Hitchens) was not
that of Iraqi governmental institutions, or even any of the local players in the
Middle East, but rather that of the Bush Administration. All of the purported concerns
that the Bushies allegedly had that necessitated regime changeWMD, pursuing
al-Qaeda, fostering democracyhave been given systematic short shrift by
Bushs actual policies.