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- <text id=91TT2839>
- <title>
- Dec. 23, 1991: Loose Buchanan
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Dec. 23, 1991 Gorbachev:A Man Without A Country
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 35
- Loose Buchanan
- </hdr><body>
- <p> Pat Buchanan's announcement that he was running for President
- was exactly in character. He was at pains to say how much he
- likes George Bush. He was communications director in the
- Reagan-Bush Administration and has dined with the current First
- Family in their private White House quarters. But Buchanan has
- his reasons for launching a full-frontal assault against the
- fellow Republican he likes so much. For Buchanan, Bush is
- insufficiently Buchanan-like--not nativist, rightist,
- homophobic, authoritarian or anti-Israel enough.
- </p>
- <p> Like many ultraconservatives, Buchanan is unfailingly kind
- and generous to people regardless of their background. But he
- can be just as cruel to the groups to which they belong. To
- him, gays are "sodomites," the poor are "freeloaders," and
- immigrants from anywhere but Western Europe are a threat to the
- American way of life. Buchanan's remarks about Jews in
- particular are so provocative that his fellow panelists on TV
- political talk shows--including Al Hunt of the Wall Street
- Journal, Morton Kondracke of the New Republic and Washington
- Post columnist Mark Shields--have felt the need to say
- publicly that their colleague is not an anti-Semite.
- </p>
- <p> That issue came up during the debate over whether the U.S.
- should use force to expel Saddam Hussein from Kuwait. Buchanan
- charged that there were "only two groups that are beating the
- drums for war in the Middle East--the Israeli defense ministry
- and its amen corner in the U.S." New York Times columnist A.M.
- Rosenthal accused Buchanan of anti-Semitism and "blood libel"
- (a reference to the canard leveled by bigots since the Middle
- Ages that Jews kill Christian children and use their blood in
- making Passover matzo). Rosenthal's attack was so outrageous
- that Buchanan survived the storm.
- </p>
- <p> Now the man Buchanan reveres as his "spiritual guide" has
- taken Buchanan to the woodshed. In a 38,000-word essay in the
- National Review, William F. Buckley Jr., the godfather of
- conservatism, writes, "I find it impossible to defend Pat
- Buchanan against the charge that what he did and said during the
- period under examination amounted to anti-Semitism, whatever it
- was that drove him to say and do it; most probably an
- iconoclastic temperament."
- </p>
- <p> That iconoclastic temperament has also driven Buchanan to
- give sympathetic attention to crackpot Holocaust revisionists.
- In addition, he made intemperate comments during his crusade to
- prove the innocence of John Demjanjuk, a retired Cleveland
- autoworker convicted by an Israeli court of having helped murder
- hundreds of thousands of Jews as a Nazi death-camp guard known
- as Ivan the Terrible. There is considerable evidence that
- Buchanan may be right that Demjanjuk could not have been the
- mass murderer of Treblinka. But Buchanan has also claimed that
- diesel engines do not emit enough carbon monoxide to kill
- anybody, much less 850,000 people at Treblinka; that the U.S.
- should not have apologized to France for protecting Nazi war
- criminal Klaus Barbie; and that Arthur Rudolph, the ex-Nazi
- rocket scientist forced to leave the U.S. after the Justice
- Department accused him of brutalizing slave laborers at a Nazi
- rocket factory, was "railroaded."
- </p>
- <p> Those views go beyond being merely pugnacious. Four years
- ago, Buchanan came close to running for the presidency with the
- slogan LET THE BLOODBATH BEGIN. It is still his motto.
- </p>
- <p> By Margaret Carlson/Washington.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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