Tuesday, July 08, 2003

Why WMD lies matter: the Conservative case

Doug Bandow of the Cato Institute writes:

Conservatives' lack of interest in the WMD question takes an even more ominous turn when combined with general support for presidential warmaking.

Thus, [in the view of Republican presidents, legislators, and conservative intellectuals], once someone is elected president, he or she faces no legal or political constraint. The president doesn't need congressional authority; Washington doesn't need UN authority. Allied support is irrelevant. The president needn't offer the public a justification for going to war that holds up after the conflict ends. The president may not even be questioned about the legitimacy of his professed justification. Accept his word and let him do whatever he wants, irrespective of circumstances.

This is not the government created by the Founders. This is not the government that any believer in liberty should favor.

It is foolish to turn the Iraq war, a prudential political question, into a philosophical test for conservatism. It is even worse to demand unthinking support for Bush. He should be pressed on the issue of WMD - by conservatives. Fidelity to the Constitution and republican government demands no less.


Thanks to alert reader Beth.