Arianna Huffington’s Six-Point Reaction to Joe Klein’s Seven-Point Response

Arianna HuffingtonArianna Huffington

02.06.2007

READ MORE: Arianna Huffington, Iraq, Hollywood

I agree with Joe Klein’s assessment that there are “far more important
things going on in the world” than a clarification of his position on
the war in Iraq. But I can’t resist reacting to his seven-point response to my post on him:

1. Klein kicks off his seven-point defense (did I say seven-point?)
of his pre-invasion stance on the war by saying, “Arianna Huffington,
the doyenne of the Hollywood left, has taken time from her busy
schedule to attack me for something I said on Meet the Press three years ago.” Actually, Joe, I was taking you to task for something you wrote on your Time blog two days ago,
namely that you opposed the Iraq war from the beginning. I wasn’t
trolling around in Lexis Nexis looking for “stupid” remarks prominent
journalists made in support of the war. There aren’t enough hours in
the day for that (hell, there aren’t enough hours in the decade for
that). I only did my quick Internet search after reading your attempt
to rewrite history. Again.

2. Speaking of “the doyenne of the Hollywood left” (one of six times
in his post Klein spits out a reference to “the left”), isn’t it time
for him to stop looking at the world through his musty right/left
glasses, where triangulation between the two is seen as “delicious” and
the height of political sophistication?

3. As a student of the dark art of sophistry, I particularly loved
this Kleinian gem: “I had my doubts about my skepticism about the
war…” I know English is my second language, but let me get this
straight: you weren’t actually, as you have claimed,
“opposed to the war” since 2002 — you were “skeptical” of the war?
And, what’s more, you had “doubts” about your “skepticism.” Wow, talk
about taking a bold stand. Could you possibly cover all your bases any
more thoroughly (and inelegantly)?

4. While I’m more than willing to accept your claim
that, in October 2002, in the privacy of his Senate office, you told
John Kerry that you wouldn’t vote to give the president the authority
to invade Iraq, this only makes your unwillingness to say the same
thing publicly all the more cowardly, and your attempt to, in
hindsight, make it seem like you did, all the more pathetic. You had
the platform, you just lacked the spine.

5. This isn’t about what you dismiss as “a moment of stupid weakness
on the brink of war.” This is about a willful, ongoing attempt to claim
credit for insight you didn’t have and courage you didn’t exhibit.

6. Give it up.

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