HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031886.jpg
Extracted Text (OCR)
Article 4.
The American Interest
The Conservative Revolutionary
Walter Russell Mead
June 12, 2011 -- The United States is the most revolutionary power in
the history of the world, but after more than 200 years of a brilliant
revolutionary career we are still not very good at understanding or
responding to the revolutions our example, our ideas, our economy
and our technology do so much to create.
The Arab spring is the latest example of the clash between America’s
revolutionary world role and our pathetic cluelessness about the
forces we do so much to promote. The Arab Spring is turning into a
long, hot summer. Civil wars in Libya, Syria and Yemen and the
sullen silence of the Shi’a in Bahrain have baptized Arab democracy
in blood. More will flow — and American foreign policy is
befuddled and bemused.
None of the experts look particularly smart at the moment. The
‘realists’ who counseled President Obama to forget George W.
Bush’s support of Middle Eastern democracy and cultivate our
relations with regional despots like Hosni Mubarak, the Iranian
mullahs and the younger Assad have been sent back to the benches in
disgrace. Their counsel is now seen as both morally dubious and
pragmatically unwise; the ‘realists’ would have put the US on the
wrong side of history in the service of unrealistic assumptions about
the stability of despotic regimes.
But the idealists who seek to replace them already have egg on their
faces. “Days, not weeks” is what they promised the President when
he began to bomb for democracy in Libya. The democratic
revolution in Egypt is looking less democratic by the day; it looks
more and more as if the Army used public unrest to block the
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031886
Extracted Information
Dates
Document Details
| Filename | HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_031886.jpg |
| File Size | 0.0 KB |
| OCR Confidence | 85.0% |
| Has Readable Text | Yes |
| Text Length | 1,716 characters |
| Indexed | 2026-02-04T17:11:24.924226 |