From the category archives:

David Bromwich

I did a post yesterday, in the moment, foolishly giving Obama a break, prospectively, if Israel is to bomb Iran. Two of my intellectual betters demurred. Jack Ross:

I'm closer to Antony Loewenstein than to you on this one.  If it happened, Obama's responsibility would depend on how one defined the word; what might matter more is how he responded after the fact. Biden was just trying to speak diplomatese and doing badly, with Mullen coming in to do it better.  As a rule in all things, I totally don't get why a large section of the media, especially on the right, jumps up and down hysterically whenever Biden has a senior moment.

David Bromwich:

If Obama commands or consents to the bombing of Iran, he is responsible. Moral judgment is only intelligible as moral if you infer the motive from the action. You can't read in the motive you are comfortable with "against the very grain of" actions. That way lies a no-fault system of self-justification. It is the same argument the apologists for the Iraq war use to justify Bush. (Obama in Iran, of course, would be not a whit less guilty than Bush in Iraq, who also had the lobby to contend with). A version of the same argument has been offered by willfully sympathetic liberals to palliate the monstrous acts ordered by Cheney, Addington, Haynes, etc., on the ground that these men did what they did out of a "deep concern for their country." Obama unhappily is one of the people who have spoken that excuse for them. But, morally, we are what we do–not what we say we meant. And this must hold so long as moral identity has any meaning. If I do a thing but later say that I did not mean to and would have preferred not to, the person who extends his approval to me for my good intentions has drained the word "I" of all meaning.

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Obama vs Gelb=democracy vs covert war

by Philip Weiss on June 23, 2009 · 6 comments

In a piece in the forthcoming New York Review of Books, David Bromwich creatively opposes the post-colonial credo of Obama in his Cairo speech to a book by Leslie Gelb of the Council of Foreign Relations, which mingles the best-and-the-brightest and Machiavelli. Excerpts:

Obama spoke at the end about the general good of democracy: his predecessor's favorite and almost his only theme. Advocates of democracy ought to maintain their support for freedom even when they gain power. As for religious freedom, its sincerity is not measured by a rejection of other people's faith. And women's rights are not to be confused with the approval or discountenancing of an orthodox custom…
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Bromwich on ‘moral equivalence’ and Obama’s Cairo speech

by Adam Horowitz5 June 2009

David Bromwich writes: President Obama in his Cairo speech mentioned and named the “unprecedented Holocaust” suffered by European Jews in the years 1933-1945. He also mentioned the sufferings of Palestinians, from the dispossession of 1948 to the life under occupation…

131 comments

Iran and nothing but Iran

by Philip Weiss20 May 2009

David Bromwich writes: One inference is plain from the contrary emphases of Netanyahu and Obama at their news conference. The coming six months will see a continued aggressive insistence by Israel’s most uncritical American supporters, tuned to a single theme:…

6 comments

Bromwich on the ‘Times’ account of Israel’s plans to carve up Jerusalem

by Philip Weiss11 May 2009

David Bromwich shares my criticism of the New York Times’s article on the Israeli plans to take more land in east Jerusalem: A few details warrant further notice in the Bronner-Kershner story on the urban-renewal-by-monument-making that Israel has used to…

17 comments

Obama should state that 5th and 8th amendments bar torture

by Philip Weiss24 April 2009

Great piece by David Bromwich on Huffpo calling for a full investigation of the torture-orderers, so as to establish why they did it, and to prevent the repetition of such power-grabs. Names Jane Harman as a rationalizer of torture: “I’m…

4 comments

Bromwich: Who talks about the 4,700,000 Iraqi refugees?

by Philip Weiss7 April 2009

David Bromwich has a fabulous post on ways that aristocracy perpetuates itself–Larry Summers’s payday. And he offers this comment on James North’s piece on Mahmood Mamdani’s Darfur book, posted here yesterday: The report confirms a suspicion about the way the…

15 comments

Bromwich on Corrie

by Philip Weiss17 March 2009

Yesterday David Bromwich published a piece on Huffpo memorializing Rachel Corrie in the best way, by using her story to critique the media and the American government and ultimately to the fields of political philosophy and Jewish and American identity….

10 comments

David Bromwich: Further Comment on Walzer

by Philip Weiss8 March 2009

David Bromwich comments on Michael Walzer’s piece in Dissent on the two-state solution: What must be done on both sides has been clear for a long time. Many Israeli commentators–among them Uri Avnery–have been saying it. Palestinians (both Fatah and…

42 comments

Bromwich: Obama can learn from Lincoln, party and principle go hand in hand

by Philip Weiss9 February 2009

David Bromwich, who lectured on Lincoln’s legacy last week in Colorado, responds to a post by Phil Weiss on Lincoln’s failed 1849 effort to get a presidential appointment, commissioner of the Land Office: Why do people grasp at dirty straws…

13 comments

Bromwich: Gitmo backlash on MSNBC

by Philip Weiss24 January 2009

David Bromwich writes: Annals of Broken Journalism: At 10:25 this morning (EST) the MSNBC News anchor Alex Witt broadcast a segment entitled “Terrorists in Your Backyard?” The subject was Guantanamo. The premise: can we afford to close it? The guest…

4 comments

Israel to 2-State Solution: Drop Dead!

by Philip Weiss15 January 2009

LRB has a powerful collection of contributors condemning the slaughter. Excerpts: Yitzhak Laor: Israel is engaged in a long war of annihilation against Palestinian society. The objective is to destroy the Palestinian nation and drive it back into pre-modern groupings…

6 comments

Bromwich on Friedman

by Philip Weiss7 January 2009

David Bromwich writes: Thomas Friedman’s column today, his first on the bombing and invasion of Gaza, enthusiastically supports Israel’s actions as part of a Middle East strategy that Barak Obama ought to endorse. Friedman writes, he says, on behalf of…

23 comments