- "Faith in Power" Is Better Than "Hope" Characteristically unmoved by Obama's appeals to wayward nations, the Wall Street Journal's Bret Stephens claims neoconservatives had it right to begin with. "As the pendulum has swung to a U.S. foreign policy based on little more than the personal attractions of the president, it's little wonder that the world is casting about for an alternative. And a view of the world that understands that American power still furnishes the margin between freedom and tyranny, and between prosperity and chaos, is starting to look better all the time. Even in France."
- "Clear-Eyed Analysis"Is Better Than "Wishful Thinking" At Commentary, Jennifer Rubin concurs, chiding Obama for waffling: "Past experience, current geopolitical realities, historical precedent, and common sense are nowhere in evidence. Instead we get gauzy rhetoric and undiluted faith in talking to those who plainly dont want to talk to us (or who would be happy to talk while doing precisely what they want to anyway). And theres plenty of stalling. So it seems that 'realism' boils down to wishful thinking and a heavy dose of procrastination."
- Liberal Jews Are Making a Mistake Writing for the American Thinker, Larry Greenfield pays homage to two leading Jewish neoconservatives, Irving Kristol and Norman Podhoretz, arguing that their views have become central to modern conservatism and inviting "liberal jews" upset with Obama's Middle East policies to embrace them. "Neoconservatism should be analyzed and respected on its own merits as a rich and deep contribution to modern conservatism," Greenfield writes. "The case study of neoconservative patriarchs Kristol and Podhoretz inspires celebration and contemplation. May the religious season upon us invite their stubborn American Jewish ideological opponents to seek some penitence as well."
- The Neocon's Rising Star The New York Times' Mark Leibovich profiles Dick Cheney's daughter Liz as an incipient neoconservative icon, defending the Bush administration's use of waterboarding and her father's controversial record. Leibovich hints that Liz may soon run for office, although she has not committed to anything yet: "What is clear is that Ms. Cheney, at a minimum, has become a rallying point for conservative views on national security. In a broader sense, she is being promoted as a rising star of the Republican Party, one who is hardly shying from the Cheney brand."
- Look Who's Talking Philip Weiss rounds up recent neoconservative opinions on Iran and systematically pummels each in his Mondoweiss blog. The Atlantic's own Andrew Sullivan is likewise unimpressed: "What the neocons do not seem to be able to grasp is that America's open hand to Iran is not weakness, but strength. It calls their bluff, has refocused global attention on the real problem - not American hegemony but Tehran's insanity, and has moved the ball further forward than at any time under Bush and Cheney."
- What Does the Term Even Mean? asks Cato's Justin Logan, who also analyzes recent neoconservative writings in search of unifying theoretical tenets. He finds the material largely self-contradicting, "incoherent," and intellectually dismissive: "Its something of a parlor game in IR [International Relations] to debate whether neoconservatism is its own IR theory; whether its a theory at all, of anything; whether its really just liberalism; et cetera, but what would be really good to have is a clear statement that could be scrutinized on its own merit. Until then one is left guessing or, at best, turning up weird conspiracy theories about Leo Strauss and the University of Chicago on the internet."