We’ll learn soon enough what kind of opposition Chuck Hagel’s nomination to be the next Secretary of Defense will face, but in the meantime, as Jim Rutenberg noted over the weekend, it’s starting to sound a lot like 2006.
In the bitter debate that led up to the American invasion of Iraq in 2003, Senator Chuck Hagel of Nebraska said that some of his fellow Republicans, in their zest for war, lacked the perspective of veterans like him, who have “sat in jungles or foxholes and watched their friends get their heads blown off.”
Those Republicans in turn called him an “appeaser” whose cautious geopolitical approach dangerously telegraphed weakness in the post-Sept. 11 world.
The campaign now being waged against Mr. Hagel’s nomination as secretary of defense is in some ways a relitigation of that decade-old dispute. It is also a dramatic return to the public stage by the neoconservatives whose worldview remains a powerful undercurrent in the Republican Party and in the national debate about the United States’ relationship with Israel and the Middle East.
To be sure, Hagel has plenty of credible detractors on the left, who’ve focused on the former senator’s conservative voting record and positions on social issues.
That said, it’s hard to miss the larger proxy fight on the right. Rutenberg’s piece quoted Bill Kristol complaining that Hagel “would always err on the side of not intervening” in overseas military actions, Elliott Abrams accusing Hagel of anti-Semitism, and Richard Perle complaining that Hagel is among those who “so abhor the use of force that they actually weaken the diplomacy that enables you to achieve results without using force.”
And on the other side, we see Colin Powell championing Hagel’s nomination, and Richard Armitage telling the Times, “This is the neocons’ worst nightmare because you’ve got a combat soldier, successful businessman and senator who actually thinks there may be other ways to resolve some questions other than force.”
The intra-party fight over neoconservatism never really went away — Hagel’s nomination is simply bringing it back to the fore.
Rutenberg added:
To Mr. Hagel’s allies, his presence at the Pentagon would be a very personal repudiation of the interventionist approach to foreign policy championed by the so-called Vulcans in the administration of President George W. Bush, who believed in pre-emptive strikes against potential threats and the promotion of democracy, by military means if necessary. […]









