Publications
Publications
china leadership monitor
education next
defining ideas
policy review
hoover digest
The Hoover Institution’s library and tower will be closed on Tuesday morning, February 14, 2012, due to electrical work. The Hoover archives will be open during the process. The library and tower will reopen at 11:30 am on February 14, 2012. We apologize for any inconvenience.
January 30, 2007

Victory Is the Word

Why the United States must win in Iraq. By Shelby Steele.


Possibly the most confounding feature of the Iraq war, from the very opening of hostilities to the present day, has been the U.S. government’s utter failure to define what victory would be in this war. “Victory” has been a conjure word for the Bush administration, a Churchillian allusion meant to evoke the heroic perseverance shown in the great wars of the past. But no one in the administration has ever said what victory would actually look like. And, lacking this description, even those of us who have supported the war have seen trouble coming for some time. Without a description of victory, a war has no goal.

Historically, victory in foreign war has always meant hegemony: You win, you take over. We not only occupied Germany and Japan militarily after World War II, we also—and without a whit of self-doubt—imposed our democratic way of life on them. We took our victory as a moral mandate as well as a military achievement and felt commanded to morally transform those defeated societies by the terms of our democracy. In this effort we brooked no resistance whatsoever and achieved great success.


Shelby Steele is the Robert J. and Marion E. Oster Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution and a member of the Working Group on Islamism and the International Order. He is a prominent voice on the subject of affirmative action, race relations, and multiculturalism. In 2006, Steele received the Bradley Prize for his contributions to the study of race in America. In 2004, he was awarded the National Humanities Medal. In 1991, his work on the documentary Seven Days in Bensonhurst was recognized with an Emmy Award and two awards for television documentary writing-the Writer's Guild Award and the San Francisco Film Festival Award. Other books by Steele include A Bound Man: Why We Are Excited about Obama and Why He Can't Win (2007), White Guilt: How Blacks and Whites Together Destroyed the Promise of the Civil Rights Era (2006) and A Dream Deferred: The Second Betrayal of Black Freedom in America.


This essay appeared in the Wall Street Journal on December 8, 2006. © 2006 Dow Jones & Company. All rights reserved.

Available from the Hoover Press is American Security: Back to Basics, by Angelo Codevilla, part of the Essays in Public Policy series. To order, call 800.935.2882 or visit www.hooverpress.org.