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Against determinism

July 2, 2004 By Mark Kleiman @markarkleiman

Kevin Drum thinks that people who were doves before things in Iraq went sideways ought to be nicer to people who were hawks but have now seen the light. Well, I’m all for keeping peace in the family, but I’d go a little further than Kevin does in disagreeing with Brad DeLong on this one.

Just because something happened in a particular way doesn’t mean that it was destined to happen in that way. A sample size of one doesn’t really tell you much about the underlying distribution.

Perhaps the Iraqi intervention was foredoomed to failure, either because it was inevitable that the Bush crew would $#@! it up or because it was inevitable that Iraqi opposition would prove stiffer than anticipated or both. But it’s also possible that the extent of the $#@!-up and the extent of the resistance were contingent events that could have come out otherwise.

In my view, the resistance was unexpectedly tough in part because the $#@!-up was unexpectedly profound. The decision to dissolve the Iraqi Army, for example, could have gone the other way without forcing a fundamental re-evaluation of the operating style of the Bush Administration. Had the Iraqi Army not been dissolved, the security situaiton would have been better, and therefore the economic aspects of the reconstruction would have proceeded much faster. Given tolerable security and a reliable supply of electricity, Iraqis might have been far more tolerant of the other shortcomings of the occupaton.

Similarly, it might have occurred to the Mayberry Machiavellis that the gain from using the CPA as a patronage dump would be swamped by the losses from the resulting disasters.

So it’s fair for opponents of foreign adventures and advocates of the theory that the Bush Administration is the greatest collection of bunglers since Harding’s crew to use the Iraqi result as evidence — based on this result, a reasonable person’s guess about the outcome the next time we occupy another country or the likley results of four more years of Texan rule of our own ought to be more pessimistic — the actual result doesn’t really prove that people who expected a less awful result were foolish.

And, it might be added, since we don’t know the results of not invading Iraq, it’s not absolutely certain that the outcome we got was the worst among those available.

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