About two weeks ago, Anne-Marie Slaughter, the dean of Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, wrote a much-discussed Washington Post piece about bipartisanship. I’m hard-pressed to think of anyone who found Slaughter’s item worthwhile — it seemed to praise bipartisanship for the sake of bipartisanship. It was Broderism at its least helpful.
Slaughter, for example, argued that in the foreign policy realm, “the fiercest battle is no longer between the left and the right but between partisanship and bipartisanship.” She seemed to suggest that those of us who see disastrous policies unfolding should just keep quiet and let people in power sort things out.
Given the negative response, Slaughter is now hoping to clarify her perspective. She had a follow-up item today at TPM Cafe.
Here is my nightmare. The Cheneyites succeed in creating a situation in which Bush does decide to bomb Iran. Iran retaliates, as they openly threaten to do, with terrorist attacks against us on U.S. soil. That tilts the election. I can imagine a Karl Rove political calculation that would buttress a Cheney-Addington national security calculation, probably with Eliot Abrams’ support.
This scenario is one that any Democrat, of any type, and any moderate Republican … should be taking seriously and fighting against.
Now, Slaughter’s broader point is that sensible people on the left need to fight the administration while making common cause with Republicans, who, she argues, we’ll need to establish a meaningful policy.
But as Kevin Drum noted, Slaughter’s argument, taken at face value, is rather striking.
Let me get this straight. Anne-Marie Slaughter, one of the most accommodating, serious, centrist, liberal foreign policy players on the planet, has just said that she thinks it’s entirely possible that the Bush administration will launch a foreign war next year in order to help the Republican Party win an election.
Apparently, being serious isn’t what it used to be.
Quite right. In fact, Slaughter also called for a march on Washington against torture, which is sounds pretty far afield for an establishment player who is the dean of Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School.
It’s also a reminder that regular ol’ mainstream liberals have been driven to an unexpected ideological point over the last decade or so. It no longer sounds ridiculous, at least not to Slaughter, to think the White House would launch a war to help elect Republicans.
This is the result of Bush’s style of politics.