What is ideology? I would like to propose the most historically primitive definition term that I think is possible. When the slaves of ancient Egypt built the pyramids of Giza, it was assumed that the greatness of the pyramids was selfsame with the greatness of the Pharaohs. So, it was assumed that the slaves themselves thought the product of their toils represented the works not of their own hands but of their masters’ divinity.
But of course: while it is difficult to imagine slaves who believe this even in ancient civilization, it just as easy to imagine scholar—rulers who believe that their slaves believe it. So, in due time, in order to have subjects who “really believe,” ideology would have to evolve.
Pharonic civilization, the first nation state in the history of humanity, became the topological equivalent of ungodly royal evil in the political imagination of the Torah and consequently in the Gospels and the Qur’an, a stand-in for backward monarchy in Herodotus, and thus an archetypal political concept of rebuke for all Mediterranean civilization. This the first of many self improvements on the part of ideology over the course of world history. The very notion of “pyramidic” tyranny itself functioned as a priceless ideological concept for later regimes of antiquity. Ideology, in this way, came for the first time as an argument to the people primarily concerning what the state is not (the Hellenistic city-state, the clerical Israelite regime, is not a never-changing pharonic dictatorship). In the sublime language the US state department, such state’s, unlike the Pharaohs, were in their own understanding, “responsive to the legitimate grievances of their people.”
But what about the dialectical opposite of “legitimate grievances”—where is the place of “illegitimate grievances” in our politics today?
Certainly not, we should now finally come to see, in the criminal “anti-colonial” dictatorships formed in the mire of Cold War atrocities. The problem of “post-colonial” thought, the grave necessity for it to be overcome, should by now be clear in the recent ravings of Muammar Gaddafi. Gaddafi’s ideology takes the original negativity of the Greek/Hebrew rebuke of Egypt to an ultimate and untenable absurdity. We are witnessing in Libya very limits of the narrative of the beloved “anti-colonial struggle.”
Insofar as Gaddafi defines himself against the western crusader state, none of the real conditions imposed by his regime matter, his state has no argument for its own existence other than its grievances against Europe, Israel, and the US. Ideology has made a perfect turn here, instead of the Pharaoh’s only argument being that he is in fact the Pharaoh the post-colonial Pharaoh is only legitimate insofar as he convinces his subjects that he is not in fact the “real” Pharaoh. These grievances are not the opposite of the state department’s “legitimate grievances,” they are their reverse side, “legitimate grievances” in their third world fascist form.
"Do the armed rebels trying to overthrow that government still count as civilians?"asks George Will. As Will sees it, there is a totally Orwellian character to US rhetoric on the "Arab Spring," and to my mind the most sublime innovation has been the very opposition we've set up between the "legitimate grievances"/"legitimate aspirations" of the Arab world, which are again of course opposed to their implicit opposite "illegitimate grievances" and 'illegitimate aspirations."
But, a more radical opposition exists in Gaddafi's terms, and those of the other Arab dictators. Notice how interchangeably almost all Arab dictatorships that are currently threatened by uprisings have been willing to accuse dissenters of being "radical Islamists" and "stooges of the American-Zionist crusaders" in almost the same breath.
Have we dared to imagine that perhaps "the West" and the dictators might be afraid of the same thing? Namely, an Arab world that really wants liberal democracy, an Arab world that is just as uninterested in having its politics ruled by Western oil interests and made in America Iraqi-sectarianism as it is in being ruled by the various strains of "Islamism" and secular "Pan Arabism" that have vied for its political allegiances in the past. Not ideological ‘state self-determination’—but the opposite possibility it obscures: determination of one's state for oneself.
Here for once, the an cliché liberal discourse is in fact subversive here.
Namely, "what if "they" aren't so very different from you and me?" And furthermore, the issue here is simple: “what do they want?” “Freedom!” “When do they want it?” “Now!”
Where does this leave us with regard to our military endeavor in Libya. On this point George Will argues,
Now the administration must decide how to characterize those on whose behalf we have gone to war. They are rebels, and America, born in rebellion and culturally disposed to skepticism about authority, is inclined to think kindly of rebels. This was particularly so during the 1960s, especially on college campuses. On one of them, Antioch, the students, full of idealism and empty of information, gathered to watch “To Die in Madrid,” a documentary about the Spanish Civil War. When the narrator intoned about a column of soldiers, “The rebels advanced on Madrid,” the students cheered, unaware that the rebels were Gen. Franco’s fascists.
and then.....
But not (yet) to Yamoussoukro, capital of Ivory Coast. Members of the Congressional Libyan Liberation Caucus — it does not formally exist (yet) — presumably subscribe to the doctrine “R2P.” That is the accepted shorthand for “responsibility to protect.” This notion is central to humanitarian imperialism, a project that certainly promises to provide steady work. The Libyan venture is coinciding with a humanitarian disaster in Ivory Coast, where corpses are piling up by the hundreds and the fighting is producing displaced persons by the hundreds of thousands. They will have to make do with U.N. and French interveners until America’s humanitarian imperialists can get around to them.
What Will misses here is the basic fact that what the NATO force is up against in Libya is much more radical than that which it has overshadowed in Ivory Coast. Lawrence Gbagbo's ability to stay in power after his electoral defeat was always contingent on his ability to continue to pay civil servants and the military from state coffers. Gbagbo's power was not based on any ideological affinity for his government beyond the financial interests of specific social groups privileged by his power. Gaddafi, on the other hand, was at one point a powerful figure in the "third-worldist" political imagination and has held onto Libya like a personal fiefdom since 1969.
The mistake our commentators so often make is to argue that Gaddafi’s control of the state is a facet merely of “brute force,” a notion reiterated over and over again in news articles, that the loyalty to Gaddafi is "tribal" ala Lawrence Gbagbo. His "negative-Pharonic" ideological opposition to the US and nods to old school Pan-Arabism still garners genuine support with many sectors of Libyan society.
So why would this be an argument for military intervention? Imagine if the very ambiguity of the “rebels” aims is not something which we should look at in order to see the “real” ideology (Will's Spanish fascists) beneath the universality of their demands. What, if the people really“want the downfall of the regime”? We should read this ambiguity as a sign of how precisely universal the aspirations of the Libyan rebels, and the rebels across the Arab world, in fact are.
It is telling that some of the very neo-conservatives who so welcomed the coming of the “post-ideological” age in theory are so skeptical of it practice. This new world won’t in fact be America’s world, but when tens of thousands of Muslims have rallied in Benghazi to thank 'The West' for bombing their country, one simply cannot argue that this "any old" humanitarian intervention, whatever one's position. The outcome of the present political situation in Libya unclear, and no one can or should make prediction. The hope, and yes now it should only be a hope, is that the Libyan rebels are precisely not either "with us or against us" but rather for themselves.