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Christopher Eric Hitchens (born April 13 , 1949 in Portsmouth , England ) is among the best known and most controversial figures in contemporary American media. He is a prolific author, journalist, literary critic, and public intellectual who is often described as a "contrarian". Now living in Washington, D.C. , he has been a columnist at '' Vanity Fair '', '' The Nation '', '' Slate ,'' and an occasional contributor to many other publications. Hitchens is known for his Iconoclasm , Anti-clericalism , Atheism , Anti-fascism and Anti-monarchism . He is also noted for his acidic wit and his noisy departure from the Anglo-American Political Left . He was formerly a Socialist and a fixture in the leftist publications of Britain and America . But a series of disagreements beginning in the early 1990s led to his resignation from ''The Nation'' shortly after the September 11, 2001 Attacks . He is a vociferous critic of what he describes as " Fascism with an Islam ic face," and is now sometimes described as a " Neoconservative " or a " Liberal Hawk ," though his idiosyncratic ideas and positions preclude easy classification. Hitchens no longer considers himself a socialist, but maintains that his political views have not changed significantly. He points out that, throughout his career, he has been both an Atheist and an Antitheist , and that he has always remained a believer in the Enlightenment values of Secularism , Humanism , and Reason . EDUCATION Hitchens was educated at The Leys School Cambridge and Balliol College, Oxford , where he took A Third in Philosophy, Politics, And Economics . POLITICAL VIEWS Early career Hitchens became a Trotskyist during his years as a student at Oxford University , where he was tutored by Steven Lukes and was impressed by the example of Noam Chomsky (Hitchens 1985). He wrote for the magazine ''International Socialism'', which was published by the International Socialists , the forerunners of today's British Socialist Workers Party . This group was broadly Trotskyist but differed from more orthodox Trotskyist groups in its refusal to defend Communist states as "workers' states". This was symbolized in their slogan "Neither Washington nor Moscow but International Socialism". Hitchens left Oxford with a Third Class degree and in the 1970s went on to work for the '' New Statesman '', where he became friends with, amongst others, Martin Amis and Ian McEwan . At the ''New Statesman'' he became known as an aggressive left-winger, stridently attacking targets such as Henry Kissinger , the Vietnam War , and the Catholic Church . After moving to the United States in the 1980s, Hitchens wrote for ''The Nation''. While at ''The Nation'' he penned vociferous critiques of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush and American Foreign Policy in South and Central America . Hitchens criticized the first Gulf War , claiming—in an essay reprinted in ''For the Sake of Argument''—that the Bush administration lured Saddam Hussein into the war. "Theocratic fascism" and early disagreements with the Left Hitchens was deeply shocked by the who supported the fatwa against Rushdie and sought the recreation of the Medieval Caliphate . Hitchens is sometimes credited with coining the term '' Islamofascism '', but he denies inventing or using this term. Malise Ruthven appears to be the first to have used it in an article in '' The Independent '' on 8 September 1990 . Hitchens did use the term "Islamic Fascism" for an article he wrote for ''The Nation'' shortly after 9/11 (although again the phrase is used earlier than that, for example in '' The Washington Post '' on 13 January 1979 , and it also seems to have been used by Secularists in Turkey and Afghanistan to describe their opponents). Hitchens also became increasingly disenchanted by the presidency of Bill Clinton , accusing him of being a rapist and a serial liar. Hitchens also claimed that the missile attacks by Clinton on Sudan were a major War Crime . The support of some on the left for Clinton alienated him further from the "soft left" in the United States. On the other hand, he became increasingly distanced from the "hard left" by their lack of support for Western intervention in Kosovo . The years after the Rushdie fatwa also saw him looking for allies and friends, and in the United States he became increasingly frustrated by what he saw as the "excuse making" of the Multiculturalist left. At the same time, he was attracted to the Foreign Policy ideas of some on the Republican right, especially the Neoconservative group that included Paul Wolfowitz , with whom he became friends. Around this time he also befriended the Iraq i dissident and businessman Ahmed Chalabi . Post-9/11 After 9/11 his stance hardened, and he has strongly supported US military actions in Afghanistan and Iraq , particularly in his "Fighting Words" columns in ''Slate''. Hitchens had been a longterm contributor to the Left-wing '' The Nation '' weekly, where he wrote his "Minority Report" column. After 9/11 he decided the paper was making excuses on behalf of Islamist terrorism, and in the following months he wrote articles increasingly at odds with his colleagues. Following the 9/11 attacks, Hitchens and and Alexander Cockburn . Where he stands now Hitchens has said he no longer feels a part of the Left and does not object to being called a "former" Trotskyist. However, his affection for Trotsky remains strong, and he says that his political and historical view of the world is still shaped by Marxist categories. In June 2004 , Hitchens wrote an attack on Michael Moore in a review of Moore's latest film, '' Fahrenheit 9/11 '' {Link without Title} . Despite his many articles supporting the US '' is impending with Bush, and it's unwise and indecent for Republicans to equate Kerry with capitulation. There's no one to whom he can surrender, is there? I think that the nature of the jihadist enemy will decide things in the end" {Link without Title} . In an interview with the journalist Johann Hari in 2004, Hitchens described himself as "on the same side as the Neo-conservatives ". In that interview, Hitchens made clear that he supports not George Bush ''per se'' (still less Dick Cheney or Donald Rumsfeld ), but rather those whom he sees as the "pure" neo-conservatives, especially Paul Wolfowitz . Although Hitchens finds himself defending Bush’s foreign policy, he has little admiration for the man himself, and has criticized Bush's support of 'intelligent design.' As an anti-theist intellectual with a penchant for drinking, Hitchens was unimpressed by Bush's claim to have been "saved from drink by Jesus." In March 2005 Hitchens supported further investigation into Alleged Voting Irregularities In Ohio during the US Presidential Election, 2004 . In contributions to '' Vanity Fair '', Hitchens criticised the Bush administration for its continued protection of Henry Kissinger , whom he views as complicit in the human rights abuses of Southern Cone Military Dictatorship s during the 1970s. In 2001 he had published a book, ''The Trial of Henry Kissinger'', on Kissinger's alleged role in the crimes of regimes in South America and Asia. An even more Iconoclastic work was his 1995 book on Mother Teresa , ''The Missionary Position'', which was highly controversial. In on September 23 , 2005 . In January 2006 , Hitchens joined with four other individuals and four organizations, including the ACLU and Greenpeace , as plaintiffs in a lawsuit, '' ACLU V. NSA '', filed by the ACLU challenging President Bush's Warrantless Domestic Spying Program . [http://www.aclu.org/safefree/nsaspying/23485res20060116.html In February 2006 , Hitchens helped organize a pro-Denmark rally outside the Danish Embassy in Washington, DC in response to the Jyllands-Posten Muhammad Cartoons Controversy {Link without Title} . KEY POINTS Hitchens has taken a stance on many issues throughout his career as a "contrarian". Whilst he may not deliberately court controversy, he finds contention agreeable nonetheless. Listed below are some of the key stances he has taken throughout his career, and his reasons for these stances. Unless stated otherwise, his views on these issues have remained consistent throughout his career. Trotsky Favored Trotsky and supported Trotskyism . Also, considered Trotskyism as a bulwark against both Stalinism and the capitalist West. Nuclear Weapons Hitchens regarded the employment of nuclear weapons as the compulsory enlistment of civilians in a war, and as such a violation of individual sovereignty. Vietnam He regarded America’s intervention (and that of its allies) in Vietnam as a shameful continuation of European Colonialism , betraying the enlightenment principles of liberal democracy and human emancipation. Today, he also regards it as a betrayal of the American Revolution . Israel-Palestine Hitchens regards the occupation of Palestine as an example of Colonialism and an unjustifiable subjugation of another people. He has described Zionism as being based on "lies," but does support Israel 's right to exist. Mother Teresa In 1992, Hitchens wrote an article for the US left-wing journal, '', who was later convicted of fraud, racketeering, and conspiracy, and the allocation of these donations away from treatment and towards furthering what Hitchens considered "fundamentalist" views. Hitchens's writings have earned him the ire of conservative Roman Catholics— Brent Bozell , for example, called Hitchens a "notoriously vicious anti-Catholic." During Mother Teresa's Beatification process, Hitchens was called by the Vatican to argue the case against her. This role was previously known as the Devil's Advocate , but the position was abolished under John Paul II . Hitchens has satirically referred to his work in the case as "representing the devil Pro Bono ." Yugoslavia Hitchens argued that the choice in Yugoslavia was between what he perceived as multi-ethnic plural democracy in Bosnia and fascistic, religiously inspired ethno-cleansing driven by Slobodan Milošević ; although some strategists, such as Yossef Bodansky , argue that this position is counterproductive, given the presence in Bosnia of Islamic Fundamentalist militia. {Link without Title} Hitchens argued that defending multi-ethnic democracy was morally essential and of far greater importance than any leftish concerns about a ‘new imperialism’. Iraq Hitchens has regarded Operation Iraqi Freedom as a critical front in the conflict between secular democracy and theocratic fascism. He also argued that it was a moral necessity to support Iraq i and Kurd ish left-wing secularists. He drew parallels with the left's response to the Spanish Civil War and argued that neutrality was not an option. In his view, the anti-war left has abandoned the principles of secularism, liberal democracy, and feminism. Hitchens has written a number of articles praising the secular Iraqi politician Ahmed Chalabi . Today, Hitchens regards himself as a ' Single-issue Voter ', concerning himself with what he sees as the battle between the forces of secular democracy and those of theocratic fascism. Despite his involvement with neoconservatism, Hitchens is sometimes seen as part of the self-styled "pro-liberation left", comprising left wingers who supported Operation Iraqi Freedom. This informal grouping includes Nick Cohen , David Aaronovitch , Francis Wheen , and Julie Burchill . Neoconservatives of the last decade are hesitant to embrace Hitchens as one of their own, in part because of his criticisms of Ronald Reagan, one of the standard-bearers of that movement. INTERNATIONAL JOURNALISM Hitchens spent part of his early career as a foreign correspondent in Cyprus . In the past several years, he has continued journeying to and writing essay-style correspondence pieces from a variety of locales, including Iraq , Iran , North Korea , Chad and the Darfur region of Sudan , and Uganda . LITERARY REVIEW Hitchens regularly contributes literary reviews to the '' by Salman Rushdie ; '' Saturday '' by Ian McEwan ; the D. J. Enright translation of '' In Search Of Lost Time '' by Marcel Proust ; and the Alfred Appel Jr. annotated version of '' Lolita '' by Vladimir Nabokov (whom he named as on par with James Joyce ). PRAISE FOR AND CRITICISM OF HITCHENS Appropriately for a self-described "contrarian" who deliberately seeks to provoke, Hitchens is the subject of considerable praise, as well as of severe criticism. In September '' and Britain 's '' Prospect '' magazine. Prior to Hitchens ideological shift, the American writer Gore Vidal had declared Hitchens his "dauphin", or heir. Some criticize Hitchens for his frequent television appearances, and claim that he is egotistic and has changed his political views for personal gain. Among his most severe critics is one-time colleague and friend one of his best friends and then tried to have him thrown into prison for Perjury ; a guy who waited till his friend Edward Said was on his death bed before attacking him in the '' Atlantic Monthly ''; a guy who knows perfectly well the role Israel plays in US policy but who does not scruple to flail Cindy Sheehan as a LaRouchie and anti-Semite because, maybe, she dared mention the word Israel." Hitchens's reply can be found here {Link without Title} . There is speculation that Hitchens was the inspiration for Tom Wolfe 's character Peter Fallow in the 1987 novel '' The Bonfire Of The Vanities ''. PERSONAL Ethnic identity In an article in the ''. {Link without Title} . In a column he wrote for the '' Los Angeles Times '' on February 9 , 2006 , Hitchens wrote, "my grandmother told me as an adult that both she and my mother were Jewish, and it sent me looking for my forebears on the German-Polish border." Hitchens's brother Peter disputes that the brothers have significant Jewish ancestry. Relationship with brother, Peter Hitchens's younger brother by two-and-a-half years, Peter Hitchens , is also a journalist, author and critic. The brothers had a protracted falling-out after Peter wrote that Christopher had once joked that he "didn't care if the Red Army watered its horses at Hendon" (a suburb of London). Christopher denied having ever said this and broke off contact with his brother. He then referred to his brother as "an idiot" in a letter to '' Commentary Magazine '', and the dispute spilled into other publications as well. However, after the birth of Peter's third child, and after some secret diplomacy by Peter, Christopher expressed a willingness to reconcile and to meet his new nephew, and shortly thereafter Christopher and Peter gave several interviews together in which they said their personal disagreements had been resolved. WORKS BY HITCHENS
EXTERNAL LINKS Biographical Hitchens's work
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