It’s "What Did You Do in the War, Daddy?" week for American journalists and pundits. The 20th anniversary of our calamitous misadventure in Iraq has provided the occasion for writers to revisit and in some cases rethink the support or opposition to the looming invasion that they argued for on the eve of George W. Bush’s "preemptive" war. Support for the invasion extended well beyond the neocons, of course, winning nearly
unanimous backing from such centrist and center-left publications as The Washington Post, The New Republic (which at that point was effectively neocon in foreign-policy matters, despite John Judis’s opposition), The New York Times, and even The New Yorker (despite Rick Hertzberg’s opposition). Not so at the Prospect. On the eve of the September 2022 congressional vote to authorize the Bush administration to go to war if it so chose (Bush consigliere Karl Rove wanted to force the Democrats to go on record before the November midterms), we ran an editorial urging Democrats to vote no. The Prospect doesn’t actually do editorials, but as the article was co-authored and signed by both our co-editors, Bob Kuttner and Paul Starr, and by me (then the executive editor), it came closer to being an editorial than anything we’ve ever run.
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