The Neo-Conservatives: The Shepherd Becomes the Wolf A. Alexander, October 29th, 2006
''To keep watchdogs, who, from want of discipline or hunger, or some evil habit or other, would turn upon the sheep and worry them, and behave not like dogs, but wolves, would be a foul and monstrous thing in a shepherd...And therefore every care must be taken that our auxiliaries, being stronger than our citizens, may not grow to be too much for them and become savage tyrants instead of friends and allies.'' - Plato: Republic
The danger of myths and lies is that the creators eventually come to believe their own deceptions. Specifically this has been the fate of Donald Rumsfeld, Dick Cheney and, too, generally speaking, the entire Neo-Conservative-led Republican Party. All that Rumsfeld and Cheney are and all that the Republican Party has become is constructed entirely on deceit and self-deception. The true story of Donald Rumsfeld and by extension the Republican Party, is one of men and their movement that, at the core, came to hate the very basis for America's existence: Individual Liberties.
Perhaps, more than any other men, Rumsfeld and Cheney are most responsible for the Republican Party having become a monster that many true "Conservative" Republicans have today, come to hate and despise. Dick and Don are, and have long been "Neo-Conservatives." They are the children of a political faction born out of the sick and demented mind of Leo Strauss. Strauss was a man who believed that the liberal notion of individual liberties was at the root of all evil. According to Strauss, if left to their own devices the pathetic masses would eventually destroy the very foundation of their society.
Strauss believed that the only way to prevent the people from destroying their society was to provide the masses with myths and religion around which the entire nation could rally. In Strauss' Neo-Conservative philosophy, that the myths were lies didn't matter.
In the 1970's, Donald Rumsfeld and the Neo-Conservative adherents began to create and perpetuate those deceitful myths. The lies, for those telling them, eventually grew into a delusional self-induced and self-perpetuating paranoia. Too, they were lies that would be retold again, thirty years on. At the core of the mythology was the notion that America was the center of good and lurking just beyond the horizon - unspeakable evil. It was an evil that patiently awaited its chance to pounce upon and conquer America.
Around 1975, Donald Rumsfeld, then Secretary of Defense in the Ford administration, helped create the myth that Russia's military capability greatly exceeded that of the United States. Rumsfeld insisted that the Soviets were building this massive capability for one reason and one reason only - to conquer the United States. The problem then was, as it would be 30 years later, that the CIA did not believe the Soviets possessed this so-called military advantage. Indeed, the CIA believed the Soviet Union was beginning to crumble under its own weight.
Rumsfeld and the Neo-Cons didn't like the CIA's assessment and so, he convinced President Ford to create a special unit. Ford agreed and Rumsfeld formed "Team B." The team looked at the same data the CIA had and, as was the case in Iraq, came to completely different conclusions. Where the CIA could find no evidence of advanced Soviet sonar and air-defense systems, Team B, without any evidence at all, concluded that the absence of evidence meant they possessed highly sophisticated systems that were beyond America's detection capability.
It was this myth of Soviet supremacy -- a lie fabricated out of the imagination of Rumsfeld and other Neo-Conservatives -- that eventually led to America's proxy-war program going into hyperdrive. America, they said, needed to conquer the world and "spread freedom," otherwise, they said, the evil would eventually conquer us. Indeed, the myth led to Iran-Contra, Reagan labeling the Soviet Union "The Evil Empire," and aiding Afghanistan's Jihadist movement against the Soviets. More importantly it, just as has the failed Iraq War, led to obscene profits for certain corporations whose lifeblood depended upon America feeding a massive war machine.
When the Soviet Union collapsed, the world could see that they did not have and never had the weapons and technology Rumsfeld and the Neo-Conservatives had claimed they possessed. Still, from the mid-seventies and on through the eighties, the Neo-Conservative mythology came to define America and especially the Republican Party. Their myths had become America's reality. Interesting, too, that the myth was used more to defeat "liberalism" than it was to conquer the so-called communist threat.
Following 9/11, Rumsfeld and the Neo-Conservatives used the very same mechanisms, right down to manipulating intelligence, to create a new myth. It is the myth that al-Qaeda, the new face of evil, is waiting to pounce. It is the myth that, if we are to conquer terrorism, America must spread freedom around the globe. It is the myth that the only way to defeat terrorism is by spending trillions of dollars on the military machine. And it was the myth that Saddam had weapons so advanced and sophisticated that America's intelligence didn't have the capability to track them. Most of all, it was a myth of fear and that only they, Neo-Conservative Republicans, could keep the people safe.
Just as Rumsfeld and the Neo-Conservative movement came to believe their lies about the Soviet Union, we see today that they have come to believe their fabrications about Iraq. It is inevitable that the creators of lies and myths eventually come to believe their own deceptions. Once that happens, it becomes possible for them to rationalize anything. That includes making torture acceptable and, too, destroying civil liberties. From there it is a short trip to convincing themselves that the only way to save the people is to find among them enemies, where none exist. When that happens, the shepherd has become the wolf.