Filed under: Feature, Foreign Policy — Jason, Managing Editor on January 17, 2008 @ 3:29 am CET
Eminent international relations scholar Stephan Walt takes note of the controversy over the New York Times hiring of William Kristol for its op-ed page and rejects the premise that it is neoconservative voices that are under-represented in public discourse regarding foreign policy. Instead, Walt argues that what is really missing is a realist perspective — an intellectual tradition long dominant in academic circles, but strangely lacking among “public intellectuals” like those that dominate op-ed pages.
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1 Rudi666
January 17, 2008 @ 5:09 am CETLOL - It’s just that reading the realists is boring compared to the likes of the neo-cons and rabid anti-war liberals. The realist are on many op-ed pages, they just don’t write as featured columnists. The foreign affairs periodical feature realists, but their websites are pay-per-view. One of my favs is Cordesman, but look at the exposure he recieved, compared to O’Hanlon. PBS and Charlie Rose feature realists, yet only "girlie men" watch PBS and Charlie Rose. Granted MSM does ignore Zig and Scrow, but PBS gives them more than lip service, but nobody watches them.
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/middle_east/jan-june07/iraq_02-01.html
2 Rudi666
January 17, 2008 @ 5:28 am CETOne more point, how many comments do you expect on this post? I bet 3 or 4, it lacks the emotion of a typical post.
3 Jason Steck
January 17, 2008 @ 5:32 am CETI have lots that I would like to say about Walt, but I have to be careful what I say about a widely-respected senior scholar in my own field even though I feel very strongly that my comments would be justified. So I am, in this instance, self-censoring.
4 Rudi666
January 17, 2008 @ 6:27 am CETOK - But what about the lack of realists in media? If one digs enough realism is there. Prior to the surge, Zig and Scow talked but no one listened. Here’s your "who’s who of realists.
MSM handles news like ReadersDigest handles serious literature. LOL - A discussion without the threats of banning or editting.
5 Jimmie
January 17, 2008 @ 6:37 am CETI had a bit to say about this op-ed myself. I think it’s a fairly silly assertion to say that realists are underrepresented in the MSM. I spent about ten minutes on Google and found plenty of opinion pieces from and news stories featuring the opinions of just two noted realists. Realists have plenty of voice. They’ve also held a near monopoly on our foreign policy for longer than I’ve been alive. What more voice do they require?
Walt’s quibble is that the Times hired a "neocon". One. Good grief.
6 daveinboca
January 17, 2008 @ 11:01 am CETUh…, I spent a couple of years at CSIS in the early ’80s & worked with fellows like Bulent Alireza [who wasn’t at CSIS at the time] & Bob Ebel [also a later addition] and Tony Cordesman. I consider Tony & Bob the only "realists" among the people I worked with who are now at CSIS, and consider Bob Kagan smarter than just about any CSISers even though he’s been called a "neo-con." I have problems with Walt myself & think his book with Mearsheimer a classic case of non-experts working out their biases in print.
I consider Nye and Huntington two great realists, so that’s where I’m coming from. And Frumkin on the Middle East, along with Fouad Ajami. I worked with Frank Gaffney & consider him slightly deranged. Now he’s Huckabee’s advisor!!
7 Jason Steck
January 17, 2008 @ 1:51 pm CETAnd then you had to go and ruin it already by taking a gratuitous, unprovoked swipe about something you already know we don’t welcome comments about. Please consider this your final warning.
8 Jason Steck
January 17, 2008 @ 1:52 pm CETDave, Nye is tough to classify as a realist since his focus on "soft power" bears distinctly liberal and even some constructivist elements. And I view Huntington’s "clash of civilizations" hypothesis as an intrinsically constructivist theory.