Wednesday, April 28, 2004

"Looking Through Keyholes"

This column from David Brooks is very, very good. He understands the pundit-mindset completely:


What's going on is obvious. The first duty of proper Washingtonians is to demonstrate that they are smarter than whomever they happen to be talking about. It's quite easy to fulfill this mission when you are talking about the past. It's child's play for a salad-course solon who spent the entire 1990's ignoring foreign affairs to condemn the administration piously for not focusing like a laser beam on Al Qaeda on Aug. 6, 2001.

It's harder to be a smart aleck about the future, especially in regards to Najaf and Falluja, where none of the choices are good ones. Do the Baathists win a victory every day they hold off our siege? Or if we take them out now, do we undermine Sistani? We Klieg Light Kierkegaards will give you the right answer — three years from now, after whatever option the president takes has been judged and found wanting.


Victor Davis Hanson made this point even before the war began here:

Post Modern War

The problem is not partisan or ideological. Rightwing pundits do it too as I noted here and here.

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