Joshua Muravchik, an influential neoconservative writer and activist, is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where he specializes in “the United Nations, neoconservatism, the history of socialism and communism, the Arab-Israeli conflict, and global democracy, terrorism, and the Bush Doctrine.”1 Like many of his colleagues at AEI, Muravchik is an outspoken proponent of an aggressive “war on terror” and has fervently championed U.S. military intervention in the Middle East, including in Iran. In a 2006 op-ed for the Los Angeles Times, for example, Muravchik opened with the line, “WE MUST bomb Iran.”2
Muravchik, a trustee at Freedom House, served during the George W. Bush administration on the State Department’s Advisory Committee on Democracy, along with Vin Weber and Carl Gershman of the National Endowment for Democracy, Lorne Craner of the International Republican Institute, and Clifford May of Foundation for Defense of Democracies, among others.3
A former chairman of the Young People's Socialist League, a youth group associated with the Socialist Party of America before the party’s break up in the early 1970s, Muravchik has been a key player in the neoconservative advocacy world since the mid-1970s, when he served as the director of the Coalition for a Democratic Majority, a hardline Democratic Party pressure group led by, among others, Penn Kemble and Sen. Henry "Scoop" Jackson that aimed to fight the influence of anti-war elements within the party in the wake of the Vietnam War. Muravchik, like many neoconservatives, shifted to the Republican Party after being largely ignored by his erstwhile Democratic colleagues. In the early 1980s, Muravchik and a group of like-minded hardline foreign policy elites tried to build on the momentum of Ronald Reagan's presidential election victory by forming the Committee for the Free World, a group led by Midge Decter (married to Commentary editor-at-large Norman Podhoretz) and Donald Rumsfeld. The group was devoted to promoting freedom "in the world of ideas" and opposing the influence of those in and outside the United States "who have made themselves the enemies of the democratic order."4
More recently, Muravchik has been associated with a string of hawkish pressure groups supporting the “war on terror” and interventionist policies in the Middle East. He signed multiple letters published by the Project for the New American Century (PNAC) advocating a broadened antiterror fight; he supported the 2002 creation of the Coalition for Democracy in Iran, a group spearheaded by Michael Ledeen and Morris Amitay that advocates regime change in Iran; he was an advisory board member of the now-defunct Committee for the Liberation of Iraq; he is associated with the hawkishly pro-Israel think tanks Washington Institute for Near East Policy and Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs 5 ; he joined a plank of other neocons in forming a revived version of the Cold War Committee on the Present Danger; and he serves as an "international patron" of the Cambridge, England-based Henry Jackson Society,6 an organization that promotes a "forward strategy" aimed at assisting democratization across the globe.
His leading position in the neoconservative faction was demonstrated in November 2006 with the publication in Foreign Policy of a "Memorandum" from Muravchik to "My Fellow Neoconservatives." Lamenting neoconservatives’ tarnished reputation because of their association with the Iraq War, Muravchik tried to revive the spirit of his fellow travelers, many of whom he claimed had attempted to distance themselves from the “neoconservative” label. "Where is the joie de combat?" pleaded Muravchik. "The essential tenets of neoconservatism—belief that world peace is indivisible, that ideas are powerful, that freedom and democracy are universally valid, and that evil exists and must be confronted—are as valid today as when we first began. That is why we must continue to fight. But we need to sharpen our game."7
Muravchik's suggestions for the future were unsurprising: Neoconservatives "need to pave the way intellectually now and be prepared to defend the action" when Bush bombs Iran's nuclear facilities, which—"make no mistake"—he will have to do "before leaving office." Arguing that "twice in the last quarter-century we had the good fortune to see presidents [Reagan and Bush the younger] elected who were sympathetic to our understanding of the world," Muravchik implored his comrades to begin preparing for the 2008 presidential campaign, promoting "Sen. John McCain [or] former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani," both of whom "look like the kind of leaders who could prosecute the war on terror vigorously." He added: "As for vice presidential candidates, how about Condoleezza Rice or even Joe Lieberman?"9
During the lead-up to the 2008 presidential election, Muravchik championed the candidacy of Senator McCain. Discussing his support for the senator, Muravchik told a debate audience at the Nixon Center in September 2008, “If McCain is president, there will be an attack on Iran’s nuclear facilities.”10 Commenting on the talk, journalist Jim Lobe wrote, “I would have to take Muravchik’s prediction seriously given his longtime perch at AEI, McCain’s favorite foreign-policy think tank, and his long association with some of McCain’s closest advisers, including Robert Kagan.… Of course, bombing Iran has been a devout and explicit wish on Muravchik’s part for nearly two years if not more, so this may be an example of wishful thinking, but I can’t help but believe his associations give him some real insight on this question.”11
In the late 1980s and early 1990s, Muravchik played an important role trying to adapt neoconservative ideas to the rapidly evolving international situation. Muravchik endeavored to craft a new interventionist mission for the United States as the Soviet Union crumbled, an event that wreaked havoc on the neoconservative anticommunist and anti-détente consensus that had been in place since before the election of Reagan. As scholar John Ehrman put it, "The neoconservatives' view of the world assumed a stable, malevolent Soviet Union that was immune from drastic change."12 With the rise to power of Mikhail Gorbachev and the ensuing warming relations between the two superpowers, neoconservatives experienced a sharp decline in their influence in the Reagan administration and a rupture within their own ranks. The neoconservatives entered "a period of increasing confusion," writes Ehrman, which was characterized by "an intellectual failure.”13 Lacking a clear enemy, some neoconservatives, like Irving Kristol, began reconsidering whether the United States needed to undertake an aggressive role in global affairs, while others sought to find renewed justification for continued military mobilization—some by attempting to rehabilitate the Soviet threat, others by envisioning new threats and missions for the United States.
Among the second group were people, including Muravchikand Washington Post columnist Charles Krauthammer, who championed a new mission, one aimed at capitalizing on the U.S. position as lone superpower to aggressively promote democracy and American values as a replacement for militant anticommunism. In his seminal 1990 Foreign Affairs article, "The Unipolar Moment," Krauthammer wrote that if "America wants stability, it will have to create it." The alternative to "such a robust and difficult interventionism," he argued, "is chaos." For his part, Muravchik argued that if "communism soon completes its demise, U.S. foreign policy still should make the promotion of democracy its main objective."14
For Muravchik and other neoconservative hardliners, people like Kristol and Tucker had ceased being neoconservatives by the end of the 1980s. Instead, they were, according to Muravchik, conservative neo-realists or "right isolationists." Around the ideas promoted by Muravchik and Krauthammer a new era of neoconservatism began to emerge, one spearheaded by what Halper and Clarke called a "Young Turk faction," which grew to include the offspring of many of the earliest neoconservatives, including William Kristol (son of Irving), Robert Kagan (son of Donald), John Podhoretz (son of Norman), and Daniel Pipes (son of Richard). Among this faction's early agenda items were: 1) aggressively advance democracy across the globe as the "touchtone of a new ideological American foreign policy," as Krauthammer phrased it in his 1989 article "Universal Dominion: Toward a Unipolar World," which appeared in the Irving Kristol-founded National Interest; and 2) in the aftermath of the first Gulf War, promote the idea that rogue states equipped with nuclear weapons were America's new enemies—or, as Krauthammer defined them in "The Unipolar Moment:" "small aggressive states armed with weapons of mass destruction and possessing the means to deliver them." Such states, argued Krauthammer, "will constitute the greatest single threat to world security for the rest of our lives."19
Muravchik is a prolific writer, having published a number of books, including Heaven on Earth (2002), about the rise and fall of socialism that served as the basis for a PBS documentary by the same title, and The Future of the United Nations (2005), which argues for a dramatically reformed and less influential United Nations. Other books by Muravchik include Exporting Democracy (1991) and The Imperative of American Leadership (1996). He is also author of hundreds of articles for a variety of publications, including Foreign Policy, Commentary, National Review, and various U.S. newspapers.
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Affiliations 20
American Enterprise Institute: Resident Scholar
Freedom House: Member, Board of Trustees
Henry Jackson Society: International Sponsor
Committee on the Present Danger: Member
Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs: Member, Board of Advisors
Committee for the Liberation of Iraq: Former Member, Advisory Board
Project for the New American Century Statement: Signatory to Multiple Open Letters
Institute of World Politics: Adjunct Professor (1992-current)
Washington Institute on Near East Policy: Adjunct Scholar (1986-current)
Coalition for a Democratic Majority: Executive Director (1977-1979)
Young People’s Socialist League: President (1968-1973)
Government Service
State Department: Member, Committee on Democracy Promotion
U.S. Commission on Civil Rights: Member, Maryland State Advisory Committee (1985-1997)
Commission on Broadcasting to the People's Republic of China: Member (1992)
Education
City College of New York: B.A.
Georgetown University: Ph.D. in International Relations
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