This week, prominent conservative pundit George Will wrote a column advocating the withdrawal of U.S. troops from Afghanistan. His piece, not surprisingly, was met with instantaneous anger, disdain and derision from most of the right.
“But let’s be honest,” wrote noted neoconservative William Kristol on The Washington Post’s blog. “Will is not calling on the United States to accept a moderate degree of success in Afghanistan, and simply to stop short of some overly ambitious goal. Will is urging retreat, and accepting defeat.”
Tossing around the words “retreat” and “defeat” — or, as one critic more creatively asserted, Will’s column “could have been written in Japanese aboard the USS Missouri” — is the rhetorical equivalent of the vacuous “chicken hawk” charge leveled at any civilian who supports military action. It’s emotive and hyperbolic, and I probably have used it myself, but it’s not an effective argument.




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