The neo-cons - and the tribe they derive from - have a fascination with 'oz -"strength"- and force as a way to solve all problems, rooted in a sense of Jewish weakness and vulnerability vis-à-vis the goyim. Ian Buruma has a fascinating take on the senile neo-con patriarch Podhoretz and his lust for serial world wars, His Toughness Problem - and Ours.
I just finished the link, Peetie. Norman Podhoretz is a foreign policy adviser Rudy Giuliani? Oy. Here's the rest of Rudy's team. It reads like the 2nd shift at Katz's Deli:
Rudy Giuliani Announces Foreign Policy Team Members
Charles Hill to serve as Chief Foreign Policy Advisor; Norman Podhoretz joins as a Senior Foreign Policy Advisor
New York City The Rudy Giuliani Presidential Committee announced today several members of Mayor Giulianis foreign policy team. The team will advise the Mayor on a foreign policy vision that advances the United States as a world leader, while expanding Americas involvement in the global economy, strengthening our reputation around the world, and keeping our country on the offense in the Terrorists War on Us.
Charles Hill, former executive aide to President Ronald Reagans Secretary of State George P. Shultz, a lecturer in the International Security Studies program at Yale University, a special consultant on policy to the United Nations Secretary-General, and a research fellow at the Hoover Institution, will serve as the Chairman of the Senior Foreign Policy Advisory Board. He is also the campaigns Chief Foreign Policy Advisor.
Senior foreign policy team members include Norman Podhoretz and Senator Bob Kasten. Other team members include Steve Rosen, Senior Defense Advisor; Martin Kramer, Senior Middle East Advisor; S. Enders Wimbush, Senior Public Diplomacy Advisor; Peter Berkowitz, Senior Statecraft, Human Rights and Freedom Advisor; and Kim R. Holmes, a Senior Foreign Policy Advisor.
DEPARTMENT Washington Babylon BY Ken Silverstein PUBLISHED August 28, 2007 Add another neoconservative adviser on the Middle East to an already impressive rosterDaniel Pipes signed on with Rudy Giulianis campaign today. Id heard Pipes was advising Giuliani and asked him about it yesterday. He told me by e-mail that he had close relations with several people in the campaign, but said that he did not have official connection to it. He e-mailed back just now to say that, as of today, he has officially signed up with the campaign.
I think its fair to say that Pipes is even further out ideologically than Norman Podhoretz, another Giuliani adviser. Readers unfamiliar with Pipes can check out his profile at Wikipedia. For a representative sampling of his work, consider a 2006 article he wrote in the Jerusalem Post (not available online):
Iraqs plight is neither a coalition responsibility nor a particular danger to the West. Fixing Iraq is neither the coalitions responsibility, nor its burden. When Sunni terrorists target Shiites and vice versa, non-Muslims are less likely to be hurt. Civil war in Iraq, in short, would be a humanitarian tragedy, but not a strategic one.