Sunday, June 25, 2006

Steyn on Redeployment and Global Politics

Global-Content Provider Mark Steyn's weekly contribution to the Chicago Sun-Times (motto: the classiest tabloid newspaper on the planet) is normally excellent. Today's (already linked below) is superb, both for its scathing criticism of the Ds' call for "redeployment" and even more for its trenchant analysis of global politics.

On the latter, we offer a couple of teaser quotations.

Beginning with the note that the Democrats unveiled a call for a "dignified retirement for all Americans," Steyn observes:

If you were a 5-year-old boy standing in the London streets in 1897 for Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee parade and marveling as the hussars and lancers of the mightiest empire the world had ever known passed before your eyes, it would have seemed inconceivable that you'd be celebrating your 80th birthday in a decrepit ramshackle broken-down strike-bound basket case of a state. Permanence is the illusion of every age. And, if you're interested in a "dignified retirement," you might want to give some thought to the shape of the world the day after tomorrow.

And so the larger point:

The danger we face is not a Chinese superpower or an Islamist superpower: If it's a new boss, you learn the new rules and adjust as best you can. But the greater likelihood is of a world with no superpower at all in which unipolar geopolitics gives way to nonpolar geopolitics, a world without order in which pipsqueak thug states that can't feed their own people globalize their pathologies. There would be more stories like that one the other day about the three decapitated policemen whose heads were found in the Tijuana River. But Pelosi would carry on talking about college tuition as the world sinks into economic decline, arbitrary bombings and kidnappings, and the occasional nuking.

And so finally:

Luxembourg can be Luxembourg. America doesn't have that option. In a nonpolar world, there's nowhere to redeploy to.

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