Swift Boat Veterans for Truth

Let them slug it out with Kerry and his minions. The truth, to the extent it can ever be known, will come out in the process — which will generate much more heat than light. But that’s the way of politics.

It’s far better than the alternative, which is to suppress political speech. We’re almost there, thanks to McCain-Feingold, Bush’s decision not to veto, and the Supreme Court’s abandonment of the First Amendment in upholding McCain-Feingold’s most oppressive elements.

If free speech is on the way out, as it may well be, at least it’s going out with a bang.

That’s all I have to say. I’m sorry to disappoint you if you found this post because you were searching for something meaty about the Swift Boat Vets. But, as long as you’re here, have a look around. There’s some rather meaty stuff on other issues.

This Is a Test

Here we have Iran, warning of a preemptive strike on U.S. forces in Iraq. According to the linked news story, Iranian Defense Minister Ali Shamkhani warns that Iran might launch a preemptive strike against U.S. forces in Iraq to prevent an attack on its nuclear facilities. Shamkhani also makes the usual belligerent statements about Israel.

Here’s the first question. Suppose we have good intelligence and warnings that Iran is about to launch a preemptive strike, either against U.S. forces or Israel. Should we preempt Iran’s preemption? I say yes. Why should we wait to be attacked? Where’s the sense in that? If someone is going to die, it should be our enemies, not Americans or our friends in Israel.

Now, let’s make it harder. What about attacking Iran’s nuclear facilities if we have good intelligence that those facilities are in fact ready to produce nuclear weapons. Again, I say yes. Iran is clearly belligerent to the U.S. and Israel. Why wait until Iran can produce weapons that might be used against U.S. forces or Israel? I say it again: If someone is going to die, it should be our enemies, not our Americans or our friends in Israel.

What’s so hard about that?

This Guy Wants to Be Commander-in-Chief?

The New York Times reports:

Kerry Criticizes President’s Troop Plan

By JODI WILGOREN

Published: August 19, 2004

CINCINNATI, Aug. 18 – With repeated references to his own service in Vietnam, Senator John Kerry told fellow members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars here on Wednesday that President Bush’s plan to move 70,000 troops out of Europe and Asia was vague and ill-advised in view of the North Korean nuclear threat….

Ground forces aren’t a counter to a nuclear threat. For that we have intercontinental ballistic missiles, sea-launched ballistic missiles, and long-range bombers with cruise missiles — none of them based in Korea. The only thing Kerry learned in Vietnam was the location of the Cambodian border. Nope, not even that.

What Kind of Libertarian Am I?

How can a libertarian not only support the war in Iraq but also support pre-emptive war? How can a libertarian even contemplate the suspension of civil liberties in wartime? How can a libertarian oppose abortion? Those are reasonable questions. Here are the answers:

I am a libertarian, not an anarchist. A minimal state is necessary in order to preserve liberty, that is, the enjoyment of life to the extent that our mental and material means enable us to enjoy it. Because I am not an anarchist, I am not reflexively against all activities of the state. I am in favor of those activities that protect us from violence, theft, and fraud — provided that such activities conform to the dictates of constitutional laws.

I am against any activity of the state that is not intended — in fact as well as in word — to protect us from violence, theft, and fraud. Such activities include, for example, censoring political speech for any reason, regulating business in any way, subsidizing any person or business for any reason, or providing services other than defense, policing, and courts. I am against such activities for two reasons: (1) they intrude on our ability to decide for ourselves how to enjoy our liberty, and (2) they make our liberty less enjoyable by robbing us of resources and eliminating incentives to work hard and make sound investments.

The activities I endorse and the activities I oppose have the same end: to maximize our enjoyment of life and the acquisition of the things that make it enjoyable, whether those are material or mental. In sum, the state should protect us from others — including the state itself.

I admit that even within my fairly restrictive framework there are gray areas in which the scope of activity permitted to the state is open for debate. When it comes to fighting a determined and elusive enemy, I am willing to err on the side of too much activity by the state rather than too little. Thus, with respect to pre-emptive war and the temporary suspension of civil liberties as a possible necessity of war:

• Pre-emptive action against foreign enemies may well be the most effective way to defend ourselves from them. I think it is, as I will argue at length in a future post.

• The temporary suspension of civil liberties might also prove to be necessary for the protection of Americans’ lives, liberty, and property — though I certainly have nothing in particular in mind. I am confident that any such suspension would be short-lived and that civil liberties would be restored fully, if not expanded, as they were in the aftermath of the Civil War and World War II.

As for abortion, I see it as (1) the taking of innocent lives by force and (2) a step down the slippery slope to the taking of more innocent lives by force. When people acquire a taste for god-like behavior they seek new outlets for it; power corrupts absolutely. Look at the expansion of abortion rights to include the killing of babies at full term and the selective killing of fetuses to avoid carrying more than one to full term. The killing of babies will not stop short of birth. As for the killing of the aged and infirm, it took years to overturn a Virginia law that enabled physicians to allow patients to die against their wishes or the wishes of their families. Unfortunately, that may not be the end of it, in Virginia or elsewhere.

I conclude that my positions on these matters are absolutely consistent with my libertarian principles, which are absolutely within the mainstream of libertarianism.

It’s about Time

The Observer, at Guardian Unlimited, tells us:

US to redeploy 100,000 troops and shut bases

Peter Beaumont

Sunday August 15, 2004

The Observer

President George Bush will announce tomorrow that the US military will pull up to 100,000 troops out of Europe and Asia in the biggest redeployment since the end of the Cold War [14 years ago!].

The plan will see a number of US bases in Germany closed down [good!], and troops returned home or redeployed to Eastern Europe.

The redeployment – first reported by The Observer in February last year in the run-up to the invasion of Iraq – will be presented by Bush as a logical response to the war on terrorism [true] when he addresses the 2.6 million-member Veterans of Foreign Wars at its annual convention in Cincinnati.

In February last year, however, when the proposal was first mooted, Pentagon officials presented the closure of the bases in Germany as punishment for Germany’s refusal to back the war in Iraq [also true].

Pentagon officials, who confirmed the planned announcement in yesterday’s Washington Post, said the change is necessary to adapt the nation’s military to the demands of the global war on terrorism and to take advantage of new technology [also true].

But the planned restructuring also comes amid overstretch in a US army struggling to juggle commitments in Iraq, Afghanistan and other theatres, and has been responsible for declining morale particularly in combat units…. [Another good reason for pulling troops out of Germany.]

So many good things can flow from one rational decision. Of course, being Americans, we’ll probably help Germany again if it falls under the rule of an evil dictator or is threatened by an evil empire to its east.

No Kidding?

NYTimes.com tells us, in a headline, that Diplomacy Fails to Slow Advance of Nuclear Arms. This one’s about North Korea, but it might as well be about the Middle East or almost anywhere else.

Theodore Rex didn’t get a lot of things right, but he hit it right on the head when he said “Speak softly but carry a big stick.”

A Fair and Balanced View of Security in the Big Apple

Stephen Evans, North America business correspondent for BBC News, asks US security: Protection or intrusion? And this is his answer:

…There is a view that states of permanent high alert and tension suit President George W Bush’s election hopes.

You do not have to subscribe to that theory to think that the authorities are getting it right.

It may be, rather, that putting security at the top of the agenda legitimises endless intervention in our lives. And because the enemy is unknown, it is impossible to know how much intervention is warranted.

So the police scream around in convoys. People in uniform – railway officials, hotel staff, security guards – seem to think they have a right to know your business.

That is not a conspiracy to keep the people frightened.

Anyway, I am not sure that a state of constant alert does suit President Bush.

A weariness and a wariness of officialdom may be setting in with people who think they have heard that cry of “Wolf!” once too often.

Of course, if there were a serious bomb attack, let us say a week before the election, that would be a different political matter.

Mr Bush might then look like the strong defender, the man whose warnings were prescient.

Terrorists shape our daily lives in tedious ways.

They also shape the election for president of the United States of America.

John Lehman Nails It, As Usual

Rod Dreher, posting on The Corner, shares his notes from an editorial board session with John Lehman. Here’s my favorite:

8. “The Secretary of Transportation is obsessive about [racial profiling]. He will not relent on it….”

He raked Norm Mineta over the coals for his “absurd” fear of racial discrimination, which prevents common sense screening at airports. Lehman said we have limited resources, so we should apply them intelligently.

“We’re spending nine-tenths of the money we have on people who have 99/100ths of one percent of the likelihood of being terrorists, because we want to be politically correct. It’s crazy,” Lehman said.

One of my colleagues suggested that perhaps as a Japanese-American who was interned as a child during WW2, he has a special perspective on how badly things can go when profiling goes too far. Lehman wasn’t having any of this.

“Look, that’s his problem, not my problem,” he said. “I’ve got problems too, and I don’t take them out on [public policy].”

Lehman leapt into prominence as Secretary of the Navy under Ronald Reagan. Unlike most Navy secretaries, who were content to be figureheads, Lehman actively pushed his agenda: rebuilding the Navy, which had shrunk considerably in the aftermath of the debacle in Vietnam.

One of the obstacles Lehman had to overcome was a nay-saying “think piece” — a pseudo-scientific piece of claptrap — that emanated from the think-tank where I worked at the time. Lehman soon took care of that. The think-tank had been operated for 15 years by a university under a contract that the Navy had habitually renewed. But no longer. The contract was let for competition and, lo and behold, the university didn’t win the competition. Under new management the think-tank began to produce a lot less claptrap and a lot more hard analysis of real data. That is, it rediscovered its original mission, with some help from Mr. Lehman.

Refighting the Past

A FINAL UPDATE (#3 BELOW)

It started when Michelle Malkin touted her new book, In Defense of Internment: The Case for “Racial Profiling” in World War II and the War on Terror. Eric Muller, a guest-blogger at The Volokh Conspiracy, has begun scrutinizing Michelle’s book. I’d say that he’s less than enthusiastic about her defense of the relocation of Japanese-Americans during World War II and its implications for the way we might behave toward Muslims in this country. To my mind, the issue was framed best by Justices Black and Frankfurter in Korematsu v. United States (1944). Here’s Justice Black writing for the U.S. Supreme Court:

To cast this case into outlines of racial prejudice, without reference to the real military dangers which were presented, merely confuses the issue. Korematsu was not excluded from the Military Area because of hostility to him or his race. He was excluded because we are at war with the Japanese Empire, because the properly constituted military authorities feared an invasion of our West Coast and felt constrained to take proper security measures, because they decided that the military urgency of the situation demanded that all citizens of Japanese ancestry be segregated from the West Coast temporarily, and finally, because Congress, reposing its confidence in this time of war in our military leaders — as inevitably it must — determined that they should have the power to do just this. There was evidence of disloyalty on the part of some, the military authorities considered that the need for action was great, and time was short. We cannot — by availing ourselves of the calm perspective of hindsight — now say that at that time these actions were unjustified.

Justice Frankfurter’s concurring opinion says, in part:

The provisions of the Constitution which confer on the Congress and the President powers to enable this country to wage war are as much part of the Constitution as provisions looking to a nation at peace. And we have had recent occasion to quote approvingly the statement of former Chief Justice Hughes that the war power of the Government is “the power to wage war successfully.”…Therefore, the validity of action under the war power must be judged wholly in the context of war. That action is not to be stigmatized as lawless because like action in times of peace would be lawless.

That’s good enough for me.

UPDATE 1 (10:54 PM, 08/04/04):

Eric Muller’s latest post cites Greg Robinson, author of By Order of the President: FDR and the Internment of Japanese Americans, which Muller calls “the definitive scholarly account of the genesis of the Administration’s decision to evict and detain all of the West Coast’s Issei and Nisei.” Robinson’s work apparently undercuts Malkin’s “argument…that intercepted and decrypted Japanese ‘chatter’ about efforts…to recruit Japanese aliens (“Issei”) and American citizens of Japanese ancestry (“Nisei”) was ‘the Roosevelt administration’s solid rationale for evacuation.'” This is all peacetime hindsight of the sort rejected by Black and Frankfurter. You do what you have to do in wartime, based on the best information available at that time. Because erring on the side of caution — or civil liberties — can be fatal when thousands, tens of thousands, and millions of lives are at stake. Muller and company are refighting past wars. Malkin is trying to help us win the present one.

UPDATE 2 (10:35 AM, 08/05/04):

Now Eric Muller writes this:

[Malkin’s] book quotes extensively from a handful of deciphered messages (the “MAGIC” cables) about Japanese efforts to develop some Issei and Nisei as spies for Japan. It really all turns on those MAGIC cables. The trouble is that the historical record tells us absolutely nothing more than that Roosevelt, the Secretary of War (Stimson), and his top assistant (McCloy) generally had access to the thousands of messages of which these concerning potential Issei and Nisei spies were a tiny few. The record tells us nothing about who actually reviewed which of the intercepts, or when, or what any reader understood them to mean. The record is just silent on these issues–reflecting, in a way, the silence of the actors themselves on MAGIC at the time. One might well say (and Michelle does), “but they couldn’t talk or write about the MAGIC decrypts; they were ultra-secret and everybody was keen to keep them that way.” That may well be so. But that doesn’t mean we can fill in the silence in the record with our own suppositions about what they must have read and what they must have thought about what they read. In short, Michelle’s book presents no evidence–because, apparently, there is none–to show that MAGIC actually led anybody to think or do anything….

But there are the MAGIC intercepts. The rest is, as Muller admits, supposition. Why is his supposition any better than Malkin’s? Muller then changes the subject from why the Issei and Nisei were relocated to where they were relocated:

…The federal government, having evicted Japanese Americans from their homes and confined them in the late spring of ’42 in racetrack and fairground “assembly centers,” wanted to move Japanese Americans to wide-open, unguarded agricultural communities in the interior, modeled after Civilian Conservation Corps camps. But in early April of 1942, the governors of the Mountain States unequivocally rejected that idea, saying (I quote here the words of Governor Chase Clark of Idaho) that “any Japanese who might be sent into [the state] be placed under guard and confined in concentration camps for the safety of our people, our State, and the Japanese themselves.” The federal government, needing the cooperation of the states, had no choice but to accede to the governors’ demands.

So Japanese Americans ended up going into guarded camps (call them what you will) because Mountain State governors demanded it. Do you think that the governor of Idaho had access to the MAGIC decrypts, and that he formulated his demand for “concentration camps” on the basis of an evidence-based belief of military necessity? Or do you think maybe something else explained it?…

Yes, racism probably had a lot to do with how the Issei and Nisei were treated after the federal government had ordered them out of their homes. It might have had something to do with the decision to evict them. But this is all beside the real issue, which is the wholesale suspension of civil liberties in wartime — as a matter of military necessity. Justices Black and Frankfurter, quoted above, settled that issue in 1944, to my satisfaction.

UPDATE 3 (9:15 PM, 08/05/04)

The penultimate word goes to Greg Robinson, quoted by Eric Muller:

Michelle Malkin engages in overkill. Her stated purpose is to prove that the removal and confinement of Japanese American aliens, and particularly of citizens, was based on justifiable fears of espionage and sabotage, rather than racism (and thus to make the case for racial profiling by the Bush Administration). If this were all she wished to argue, she could have stopped with the signing of Executive Order 9066 itself. She could then more easily have made the case that the Army and the Executive felt obliged to act as they did considering the circumstances, though it was a terrible injustice to loyal citizens. After all, how the government’s policy played itself out afterwards is logically irrelevant to the initial cause.

That’s precisely the point I’ve been trying to make by quoting Justices Black and Frankfurter.

The ultimate word goes to Instapundit, because he agrees with what I’ve said about the Muller-Malkin exchange, namely, “most of the discussion has to do with things that happened 60 years ago, as opposed to what we ought to do now.”

The Fruits of Judicial Meddling

Remember those detainees at Guantanamo whose “rights” the U.S. Supreme Court was so avid to protect? Well, BBC News reports this:

Guantanamo inmates refuse review

Five detainees at the US naval base in Guantanamo, Cuba, have refused to participate in military hearings to review their cases, officials say….

The reviews were set up after the US Supreme Court ruled the detainees had a right to challenge their detentions….

The detainees who refused to appear when called this week were [a] Saudi, [a] Moroccan and three Yemenis….

* one Yemeni admitted being with Osama bin Laden during the siege of the Tora Bora caves near the Afghanistan-Pakistan border in 2001 and was “captured with an AK-47 rifle”

* the Saudi, 29, fought on the front line in Afghanistan and was later captured in Pakistan

* the Moroccan, 32, was a Taleban fighter captured by the Northern Alliance in Afghanistan

The first detainee who was reviewed, a 24-year-old Algerian, reportedly said he would “kill Americans” if released.

Don’t you sleep better at night knowing that the U.S. Supreme Court has placed their non-existent rights above your safety?

An Aside about Libertarianism and War

Gene Healy has myopia when it comes to libertarianism and war. In his post on “Barnett on War and Liberty” he sees the trees — the high cost of securing the rights of Iraqis — and not the forest — the strategic advantage of defeating an antagonistic regime and securing a stronger foothold in the Middle East, where Americans have vital interests. Here’s some of what Healy has to say:

Does it violate libertarian principle for the U.S. government to wrest scores of billions of dollars from the American taxpayer (possibly as much as $3,000 per American family in the case of Iraq,) in order to address rights violations committed half a world away against people not under its protection?

I’d say it does. I have a right to come to the defense of others. I do not have the right to steal Randy Barnett’s car in order to do so….

[Barnett] might say the argument above applies just as well to taxation for the defense of Americans — it says the U.S. government can’t come to the defense of Californians if it has to tax Kansans to do it. After all, none of us signed any kind of “social contract” or consented to a Constitution that pledges us to the “common defence” of Americans. But if even that limited justification of the state-as-common-defense-pact is problematic, how do you justify the state-as-world-liberator? Where does it get the authority to carry out these missions, however benevolent they might be?

In any event, I think it’s odd to proceed as if the only rights in question are the rights of those who are to be liberated.

I think it’s odd to ignore the broader question of how Americans might benefit from such ventures as the war in Iraq. To put it in Healy’s terms, you can defend California on the Pacific Coast or you go sail across the Pacific and defend California on the enemy’s coast. That’s what we did in World War II. In my view, that’s just what we’re doing now, in the Middle East.

Put Your Money Where Your Mouth Is

The polls suggest a “convention bounce” for Kerry. The betting odds at Iowa Electronic Markets say that Bush regained his lead when the Demo convention began. I’d bet on the betting odds.

Libertarianism and Pre-emptive War: Part I

Randy Barnett at The Volokh Conspiracy has two new posts on the subject of libertarianism and war, here and here. Barnett’s posts, the posts he links to, and the comments on some of those posts have highlighted the need for a clear definition of libertarianism. In particular, we need a definition of libertarianism as it applies to the defense of America. I will offer that definition here, then (in a later post) I will offer a doctrine of pre-emptive war that is consistent with my view of libertarianism.

According to Wikipedia,

Libertarianism is a political philosophy which advocates individual rights and a limited government. Libertarians believe that individuals should be free to do anything they want, so long as they do not infringe upon what they believe to be the equal rights of others. In this respect they agree with many other modern political ideologies. The difference arises from the definition of “rights”. For libertarians, there are no ‘positive rights’ (such as to food or shelter or health care), only ‘negative rights’ (such as to not be assaulted, abused, robbed or censored). They further believe that the only legitimate use of force, whether public or private, is to protect those rights.

That’s consistent with this passage from the Libertarian Party’s introductory statement:

The Libertarian way is a logically consistent approach to politics based on the moral principle of self-ownership. Each individual has the right to control his or her own body, action, speech, and property. Government’s only role is to help individuals defend themselves from force and fraud.

Note that Wikipedia‘s definition and the Libertarian Party’s statement both acknowledge a role for government. It can’t be said often enough: Liberty is not anarchy. The state is legitimate, though not everything the state does is legitimate.

That statement may not seem to say much about libertarianism, but it does when libertarianism is contrasted with its alternatives. There are four main points on the political compass:

• Anarchy is the stateless solution, in which individuals, families, clans, and bands may or may not cooperate to defend their lives and property from others. Of course, anarchy inevitably gives way to a state, a rather powerful and oppressive one at that, because under anarchy “might makes right.”

• Libertarianism admits a minimal, neutral state to protect life and property, and therefore the liberty to enjoy them.

• Communitarianism uses the power of the state to regulate private institutions for the sake of “desirable” outcomes in such realms as income distribution, health, safety, education, and the environment

• Statism consists of outright state control of most institutions, including religion (which may be banned or allowed in only one form). Statism may be reached either as an extension of communitarianism or via anarchy or near-anarchy, as in Soviet Russia, the Third Reich, and Communist China.

In sum, those who say that the state is inherently unjust — be they anarchists, anarcho-capitalists, and anarcho-libertarians — are not libertarians, they are simply anarchists by various names. All of them must accept the logical consequences of their ideology: They have no right to life, liberty, or property; they must prey upon others or be preyed upon. Luckily for most of them, their proclaimed belief in anarchy is a cloistered virtue, cosseted in the United States by a state that is far more benevolent than the one that would arise from anarchy.

Libertarians, having a firmer grasp of reality, understand that living under anarchy, in what amounts to a constant state of warfare, diminishes liberty — the ability to enjoy life and property — for all but the strongest or most ruthless. They understand, further, that there is less to enjoy under anarchy, communitarianism, and statism because those ideologies are inimical to free markets and property rights. Libertarians therefore willingly accept a neutral state for defense from force and fraud. Libertarians understand that the presence of such a state actually makes life better for everyone but predators.

Libertarians can and do argue about how the state should go about protecting individuals from force and fraud, but one cannot be a libertarian and argue that the state is inherently an unjust institution. That untenable position is reserved for anarchists and crypto-anarchists. As “Decnavda” says in a comment on a post by John Quiggin at Crooked Timber:

I think this is entirely a means vs. ends problem, in two senses:

1. Libertarians (NOT anarcho-capitalists) believe in strong police enforcement of property rights, but their belief in these property rights places many restrictions on HOW the police can engage in this strong enforcement. The same would apply to war. You can believe that a war against a dictator is justified…but also believe in major restrictions on how that war is fought. Thus, a privately owned power plant may be an illegitimate target, while actual military bases would undoubtedly be legitimate. It may be that a libertarian legitimate war is IMPOSSIBLE to fight on PRACTICAL grounds.

2. There are two types of libertarianism: “pure” deontological libertarianism and consequentialist libertarianism[*]….A consequentialist libertarian could easily conclude…that a war against a dictator, although inevitably resulting in the deaths of innocents, will advance the overall cause of freedom.

Indeed…it seems to me that the problem discussed here is not with libertarianism, but with deontology. Not only could a consequentialist libertarian easily support a war against a dictator, but ANY deontologist would have to oppose any modern war except to repel invasion. Is there ANY deontological moral code that would authorize the intentional killing of innocent workers at power plants?

There are, of course, consequentialist libertarians who argue that we only make the world more dangerous (for ourselves as well as others) by going to war in the absence of imminent danger to the homeland. But that’s an argument about how and when to go to war, not about whether to go to war or whether pre-emptive war is always unjustified.

The deontological view — what Randy Barnett would call “defenseism” — is more troublesome. Deontological libertarians (“defenseists”) seem to say that we should never attack until we are under attack, and then we must be very careful about what and whom we attack. Such a view, aside from being suicidal in practice, implies that the innocents and private property of the United States are somehow less worthy of protection than the innocents and private property of other lands.

That leads me to these thoughts, which I ask “defenseists” and reluctant consequentialists to consider.

You, the innocent, are targets simply because you’re Americans. Your main enemy — Osama bin Laden and his ilk — don’t care about the lives and property of innocents. Your main enemy doesn’t care what you think about George Bush, the invasion of Iraq, or pre-emptive war. Your main enemy doesn’t care whether you’re anarchists, crypto-anarchists, libertarians, communitarians, or even neo-fascists. You don’t have to choose sides, your main enemy has already done it for you.

The only ideology your main enemy values is Islamism, and he would impose an Islamic state upon you if he could. But he will settle for killing and terrorizing you so that you retreat from the Middle East. He will then control it and you will become poorer and ever more vulnerable to his threats of death and destruction. Now ask yourself whether you are willing to acquiesce in your enemy’s aims before you acquiesce in actions that might — unavoidably — result in the killing of foreign innocents and the destruction of their property.

That’s all for now. This post positions me to lay out a doctrine of pre-emptive war that is consistent with libertarianism, properly understood. I’ll do that in a future post.

———-

[* Editor’s note: Borrowing from Wikipedia, a deontological libertarian believes that the use of force is always wrong, except in self-defense; a consequentialist maintains “that the rightness or wrongness of an action depends on the consequences of the act and hence on the circumstances in which it is performed.”]

Kerry, the Libertarian Non-agressor

“Any attack will be met with a serious response.” That’s what he said. Makes you feel safer already, doesn’t it?

Libertarianism and Foreign Policy

Randy Barnett at The Volokh Conspiracy writes again about libertarianism and foreign policy. He kindly mentions my posts on the subject (here and here). He also quotes some libertarian readers who are “defenseists” (“let the other guy shoot first”) and others who, like me, don’t believe in passivity. I’ll come back to this subject. For now, I just want to acknowledge Barnett’s latest post and thank him for the links.

Libertarians and the Common Defense

Randy Barnett of The Volokh Conspiracy and I have both taken libertarian isolationists to task. My posts are here and here. Barnett’s latest is here. I’ve said this:

It is not aggression to seek out and destroy the aggressor before he attacks you, it is self-defense. If you were armed and you knew that another armed person meant you harm, why would you not shoot first? This isn’t just about Iraq, where there seems to be some nit-picking debate about what weapons Saddam might or might not have been making or intending to use, and about what sort of relationship Saddam might or might not have had with al Qaeda. This is a matter of principle. Let’s get the principle right, then argue about the facts.

Barnett, in his latest post, says this:

[The] rule of law doctrine of “imminent threat” is not a necessary prerequisite of justified self defense in all cases. As I discuss in The Structure of Liberty, what is needed to justify self-defense in principle is a communication of intent to invade rights in a context that suggests its seriousness. A communication constitutes a threat that violates the rights of another if it puts him in reasonable fear of being the victim of a battery or worse.

The example I give in SOL is of someone, let’s say it is me, who takes a full page advertisement in The New York Times announcing my intention to murder [a certain person] at some time within the next 7 days. Assuming it is not obviously a joke, and that I apparently have the means to carry out my threat, would [that person] have to wait until I came around to his house and made an overt threatening act, which ordinarily is required by the law of self defense? Given the nature of this “standing threat,” need there also be a showing of imminence?

I think under these special circumstances, [that person] should not have to wait until I chose a time and place convenient for my attack but could seek me out to preemptively defend himself against me at a time and place of his convenience. In SOL I call this “extended self-defense.” What makes this hypothetical unusual and unrealistic is the unambiguously objective manifestation of intent in the advertisement. The advertisement is what constitutes the threat that is the necessary condition of self defense and no further overt act is required. Under these circumstances [that person] is entitled, in my view, to “preempt” my attack before I ever perform an act that can be deemed “imminent” (like produce a weapon and point it in his direction). But this is so abnormal a hypothetical (criminals do not normally advertise their intentions) that it does not undermine the normal importance of imminence or to the law of self defense.

But advertisements and imminent acts (like massing armies on borders) are not the only ways to communicate a threat. So would speeches coupled with less normally obvious behavior. If the content of these other communications are sufficiently clear, then self defense would be warranted even in the absence of an overt act that constitutes an imminent threat. So “imminence” may not be a requirement of even a defenseist foreign policy (assuming that a [defenseist] foreign policy is logically entailed by libertarianism, which I doubt). What is required is a threat….

None of this however, is to argue that a military invasion is always (or ever) a good foreign policy. Many libertarians are “noninterventionists” who seem to oppose almost any military invasion outside the territory of the US on the ground that the unintended consequences of such actions are likely to be terrible, as indeed they often are.

My original point was simply that this type of noninterventionism, whether right or wrong, does not follow from Libertarian principles as some of its adherents apparently assume. It is more a pragmatic judgment of the sorts of rightful actions that will or will not yield good consequences. This judgment could lead to certain principles of foreign policy, but these should not be confused with Libertarian first principles. In addition, while I respect those who hold to this position, it tends to ignore the unintended consequences of nonaction, which can be just as harmful. Unintended consequences is a concept that, logically, runs in both directions….

Finally let me hasten to add that, though I have thought a lot about Iraq as a citizen, with these posts I have only just begun to think about the relationship of Libertarianism with foreign policy. I am completely open to being persuaded that this analysis is completely wrong (as well as to encouragement that I am on the right track). Indeed, I had hoped that, by raising the issue, someone else would [do] the [heavy] lifting and save me the trouble….

My sentiments, exactly. As I said in my last post on the subject,

I’m still waiting for a libertarian who specializes in foreign and defense policy to offer a policy paper that advocates something other than an isolationist foreign policy and a “don’t shoot until you see the whites of their eyes” defense policy.

I guess I’ll have to dust off my old “defense analyst” credentials and do the job myself. But don’t expect anything soon.

Getting It Right about the Patriot Act

Orin Kerr at The Volokh Conspiracy responds to a claim by Alex Tabarrok at Marginal Revolution about the Patriot Act. In Kerr’s words,

Alex has a post suggesting that the Patriot Act is a bad law because it has been used to do some dumb things. Here is the post…:

Yeah, I feel much safer now

The USA Patriot Act has so far been used to fine PayPal $10 million dollars in an effort to crack down on internet gambling, it’s been used to intimidate a New York artist’s collective, and most recently to shut down a Stargate fan site.

Kerr then assembles the facts, which lead him to this conclusion:

So, at least as I see it: (1) it is true that a provision in the Patriot Act was used to crack down on Internet gambling, leading to a civil settlement; (2) it is not fair to say that the Patriot Act was used to intimidate a group of artists; and (3) the Patriot Act was not used to shut down a fan site.

More importantly, there’s a lot we don’t know about the effects of the Patriot Act, namely, (1) the extent to which it has deterred terrorism or made it more difficult and (2) the extent to which it has yielded valuable information about terrorist plots that have been thwarted or are being monitored.

Economists are shockingly naive at times. Well, not shockingly to me, because I’ve worked with so many of them.

Kerry’s Multilateralism Knows No Bounds

From AP via Yahoo! News: Kerry Urges More Time for 9/11 Panel:

Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry said Tuesday that the Sept. 11 commission should continue working another 18 months to ensure its proposed reforms are adopted, a challenge embraced by the bipartisan panel.

Why bother to elect a president and a Congress, then cede critical governmental functions to an extra-governmental body? But, Kerry is — for once — consistent. He would let the UN dictate U.S. foreign and defense policy.

Libertarian Nay-Saying on Foreign and Defense Policy, Revisited

UPDATED

I posted “Libertarian Nay-Saying on Foreign and Defense Policy on June 29. In that post I said

I’ve noticed that most “professional libertarians” — those affiliated with places like Cato Institute and Reason Foundation — have an isolationist (or “hands off”) view of foreign policy and military ventures….

It’s wise to be skeptical about the emanations from Foggy Bottom and the Pentagon. But knee-jerk isolationism is unwise — and unbecoming a libertarian. Libertarians generally take the view that defense is a legitimate function of government. Waiting until the enemy is at our shores or hidden among us isn’t an effective defense strategy….

Libertarian specialists in foreign and defense affairs would be more credible if they would spend more time saying what’s worthwhile and suitable, and less time saying “no” to whatever comes out of Foggy Bottom and the Pentagon.

In sum, libertarian think-tankers should be innovators, and not mere reactionaries, when it comes to foreign and defense policy. A detailed, coherent libertarian statement with a positive vision of foreign policy and military posture could be a compelling document….

P.S. A nutty, Mises Institute-type position paper that tries to explain why defense isn’t a public good will get you laughed out of town and might even cost you some big

I went on vacation the next day, and so I missed Randy Barnett’s June 30 post at The Volokh Conspiracy, in which Barnett says

the time may be ripe for a full fledged debate on the relationship between libertarianism and foreign policy. It appears that there is an assumption on the part of many libertarian intellectuals that libertarian principles entail a very specific version of “noninterventionism” in foreign policy….

I do fear that the recent anti war vociferousness of some libertarian intellectuals, of whom I have the highest regard and respect, may unfairly tag all libertarians with a very particular set of foreign policy positions about which even radical libertarians actually differ….

I confess that my instincts here are driven by the fact that I disagree sharply with the anti war stance of these libertarians, and they with me, but I do not believe my libertarian principles, or my commitment to them, have changed in the slightest….

Today Barnett writes

I was pleased to see that my suggestion a while back that there should be a debate on the relationship between Libertarianism and foreign policy was taken up by some bloggers. Most recently by Brian Doss at the always thoughtful Catallarchy (“The Problem with Libertarians Today”). Some…considered this an invitation to debate the merits of the war in Iraq, but I was more concerned with the degree to which Libertarianism qua Libertarianism says anything about foreign policy. Because Libertarianism is essentially a philosophy of individual rights, I doubt it says much about what policies either individuals or collective institutions ought to pursue other than that they should not violate the rights of individuals in pursuing them.

Even if, as many Libertarians believe, governments themselves inherently violate rights, it does not follow (as some Libertarians appear to assume) that everything such an unjust institution does is a rights violation….One of the biggest errors made by Libertarian anarchists is assuming that because an institution is an unjust monopoly (because it confiscates its income by force and puts its competitors out of business by force), this makes everything such institutions do also unjust. The latter proposition simply does not follow from the former.

As for Iraq, there were a number of valid legal justifications for initiating the latest hostilities, but if I start to describe them here I will provoke a different discussion than I intend. Any such discussion would inevitably implicate international law or The Law of Nations, which I also do not believe follows from Libertarian first principles. Sometimes it appears to me that the governments of “nations” are simply assumed by Libertarians to have the same sorts of rights in the international sphere that Libertarians specifies for individual persons….Other times even these same Libertarians know better.

However legal or justified the war in Iraq may have been, though, this does not make its initiation good foreign policy (though I think it was). And this is my point. I do not think Libertarianism qua Libertarianism tells us much about what good foreign policy may be, any more than it tells us what good business or personal policies may be. As was well-expressed by Duncan Frissell at Technoptimist (in a post with which I have some disagreement):

Libertarianism qua libertarianism is only a political philosophy and lacks theories of esthetics, ethics, theology, epistemology, and personal behavior. Libertarians as individuals are perfectly free within their political philosophy to espouse white supremacy, pacifism, private ownership of nuclear weapons, Anglo-Catholicism, atheism, the worship of Shiva, vegetarianism, the Atkins’ Diet, grammatical prescriptivism, progressive education, etc.

This claim is central to my recent paper “The Moral Foundations of Modern Libertarianism”….

And what does Catallarchy’s Brian Doss have to say?

[S]ince the advent of 9/11 and the War(s), the current Libertarian party and large swathes of fellow small-L ideological libertarians have also seemed to abandon reason and have adopted a single-issue litmus test by which to separate the Elect from the Damned. That issue is whether or not you are against The War, in all of its guises, completely and without reservation, exception, or caveat. If you are, you are a True…Libertarian. If you deviate in the slightest from the orthodoxy / received wisdom on The War, then you are Damned….

There’s a lot more in that vein — and it’s enjoyable reading for a pro-war libertarian like me — but it doesn’t really go beyond what Barnett and I have said about the reasonableness of being a pro-war libertarian.

I’m still waiting for a libertarian who specializes in foreign and defense policy to offer a policy paper that advocates something other than an isolationist foreign policy and a “don’t shoot until you see the whites of their eyes” defense policy. Perhaps this is all there is to say: A legitimate function of the state is to preserve the life, liberty, and property of its citizens. Sometimes the state will be more effective in that respect if it seeks out and destroys its citizens’ enemies before those enemies strike. But I think that the proposition can be elaborated and supported by facts as well as logic. Is there a libertarian foreign-defense policy specialist in the house?

P.S. This, from the LCD, certainly isn’t what I’m looking for, but it’s a good sample of the shallowness of intransigent antiwar libertarians. Jeremy says:

If we follow Rothbard, all libertarian theory must be built up from this axiom: “no man or group of men may aggress against the person or property of anyone else.” And if we add in Jefferson’s statement that governments “deriv[e] their just Powers from the Consent of the Governed,” then Rothbard’s statement applies equally to states. Individuals can only delegate rights that they already possess. If no individual can use force (other than in clear cases of self defense), then no government can do so either. If you have a problem with this, than libertarianism might not be for you.

It is not aggression to seek out and destroy the aggressor before he attacks you, it is self-defense. If you were armed and you knew that another armed person meant you harm, why would you not shoot first? This isn’t just about Iraq, where there seems to be some nit-picking debate about what weapons Saddam might or might not have been making or intending to use, and about what sort of relationship Saddam might or might not have had with al Qaeda. This is a matter of principle. Let’s get the principle right, then argue about the facts.

An American in Europe

Bruce Bawer, a patriotic ex-pat (he now lives in Norway), sees Europeans for what they are.

Culturally superior? Ha!

Yes, many Europeans were book lovers —- but which country’s literature most engaged them? Many of them revered education -— but to which country’s universities did they most wish to send their children? (Answer: the same country that performs the majority of the world’s scientific research and wins most of the Nobel Prizes.) Yes, American television was responsible for drivel like “The Ricki Lake Show” -— but Europeans, I learned, watched this stuff just as eagerly as Americans did (only to turn around, of course, and mock it as a reflection of American boorishness)….And yes, more Europeans were multilingual—but then, if each of the fifty states had its own language, Americans would be multilingual, too.

More sophisticated? Bah!

Living in Europe, I gradually came to appreciate American virtues I’d always taken for granted, or even disdained — among them a lack of self-seriousness, a grasp of irony and self-deprecating humor, a friendly informality with strangers, an unashamed curiosity, an openness to new experience, an innate optimism, a willingness to think for oneself and speak one’s mind and question the accepted way of doing things. (One reason why Europeans view Americans as ignorant is that when we don’t know something, we’re more likely to admit it freely and ask questions.)…Americans, it seemed to me, were more likely to think for themselves and trust their own judgments, and less easily cowed by authorities or bossed around by “experts”; they believed in their own ability to make things better. No wonder so many smart, ambitious young Europeans look for inspiration to the United States, which has a dynamism their own countries lack, and which communicates the idea that life can be an adventure and that there’s important, exciting work to be done. Reagan-style “morning in America” clichés may make some of us wince, but they reflect something genuine and valuable in the American air. Europeans may or may not have more of a “sense of history” than Americans do…but America has something else that matters—a belief in the future.

Open minded? Fah!

Then came September 11. Briefly, Western European hostility toward the U.S. yielded to sincere, if shallow, solidarity (“We are all Americans”). But the enmity soon re-established itself (a fact confirmed for me daily on the websites of the many Western European newspapers I had begun reading online). With the invasions of Afghanistan and Iraq, it intensified. Yet the endlessly reiterated claim that George W. Bush “squandered” Western Europe’s post-9/11 sympathy is nonsense. The sympathy was a blip; the anti-Americanism is chronic….If Europe’s intellectual and political elite was briefly pro-America after 9/11, it was because America was suddenly a victim, and European intellectuals are accustomed to sympathizing reflexively with victims (or, more specifically, with perceived or self-proclaimed victims, such as Arafat). That support began to wane the moment it became clear that Americans had no intention of being victims.

At least one European intellectual has it right:

To [Jean-Francois] Revel, the tenacity of European anti-Americanism…suggests “that we are in the presence, not of rational analysis, but of obsession” — an obsession driven, he adds, by a desire to maintain public hostility to Jeffersonian democracy. The European establishment, Revel notes, soft-pedals the fact that Europeans “invented the great criminal ideologies of the twentieth century”; it defangs Communism (at “the top French business school,” students think Stalin’s great error was to “prioritize capital goods over . . . consumer goods”); and it identifies the U.S., “contrary to every lesson of real history . . . as the singular threat to democracy.” Revel’s vigorous assault on all this foolishness might easily have been dismissed in France (or denied publication altogether) but for the fact that he’s a member of that revered symbol of French national culture, the Académie Française.

Touché!