"The Neocon's Man in Iraq:" I finally put up my never-before-online July 5, 2004 American Conservative article about why the neocons fell so disastrously in love with Ahmed Chalabi.
One         of the many conundrums revolving around Ahmed Chalabi, that         International Man of Mystery, is why so many neoconservatives took         seriously his assertions that he was devoted to democracy. In the Wall         Street Journal, for example, Seth Lipsky extolled the convicted         embezzler as a "democratic visionary." Why did it never occur         to them that Chalabi might simply be blowing smoke? More broadly, why         hadn't it dawned upon the neocons that their obsession with this kind of         ideological declaration is outdated?
       
        Hadn't liberals been embarrassed by megalomaniacal Cuban and Nicaraguan         revolutionaries who orated passionately about democracy while they were         hiding in the hills, but once in power quickly came to feel: "Hey,         we didn't spend all those years in the jungle living on fried iguanas         just to be voted out in some maricon election." Hadn't         conservatives been burned by the thuggish Jonas Savimbi, the Angolan         rebel who said all the right things about elections and free enterprise,         but whose murderous behavior seemed to be based on the personal         philosophy that: "I am the biggest Big Man, and therefore anyone         who gets in the way deserves to step on one of my landmines."
       
        Last February, an Oxford Research survey found that only 0.2 percent of         Iraqis consider Chalabi the "leader they trust the most." Yet,         the neocons long assumed that a majority in Iraq would vote for a man on         the lam from a sentence of 22 years in neighboring Jordan for fraud in         the collapse of the Chalabi family's Petra Bank. While the assembled         intellects at the American Enterprise Institute might buy Chalabi's         rationalization that Saddam framed him, what mattered is that the common         people in Jordan, some of whom lost their life savings, didn't. From         Jordan, Chalabi's reputation as "Ahmed-the-Thief" filtered         into Iraq.
       
        What does Chalabi really want? The simplest guess is that he wants what         too many ambitious Iraqis want these days: to be a trillionaire.           [More...]
My published articles are archived at iSteve.com -- Steve Sailer
 
 
 
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