Posted on 10/14/2003 11:09:30 AM PDT by Theodore R.
September 30, 2003
The U.S. occupation of Iraq is getting seriously weird. The U.S. Government has served notice that the occupation wont end until the Iraqis come up with a constitution, and Secretary of State Colin Powell thinks six months is a reasonable deadline. The Iraqis appointed to do the job say theyll need at least a year.
A year? The U.S. Constitution was banged out in a couple of months in the summer of 1787. Of course conditions were somewhat different. The delegates to our Philadelphia convention were sent by the 13 states, not chosen by a foreign power, and they had plenty of experience to guide their steps.
Its a little odd for an invading force to impose self-government on a conquered people. Self-government usually occurs when there are no foreigners specifying how its to be done.
The American specifications for Iraqi self-government include, according to the Washington Post, the following principles: federalism, democracy, nonviolence, a respect for diversity, and a role for women. Except for federalism, none of these principles is embodied in the U.S. Constitution, which is pretty much defunct anyway. The U.S. Government today is no more guided by the U.S. Constitution than the Unitarian Church is guided by the Book of Revelation, but the Iraqis will be expected to adhere to a constitution that hasnt been written yet.
And why must a constitution be written? The two chief allies of the United States, Great Britain and Israel, dont have written constitutions. The British Constitution can be changed by a simple majority vote in Parliament; the U.S. Constitution is supposed to be amended by a cumbersome ratification process, but can actually be changed by five votes in the U.S. Supreme Court.
You might say of our Constitution what Gandhi said of Western civilization: I think it would be a wonderful idea. Regardless, an Iraqi constitution modeled closely on our own wouldnt meet the standards laid down for ending the occupation.
Democracy, nonviolence, diversity, women this is the language of contemporary liberals, not the Founding Fathers, let alone Arab culture. And the Iraqis also have to cope with their own religious, ethnic, and tribal divisions. Good luck.
So much for the alleged conservatism of the Bush administration. The attempt to dictate the terms of a constitution for a foreign country with an alien culture smacks more of microwave cooking than of political wisdom. The Bush crowd knows little of American history and tradition, and even less of those of the Middle East.
Yet the administration is in effect choosing a new set of founding fathers for Iraq and ordering them to compose a constitution, pronto, with a gun to their heads. Is it any wonder that the world sees Americans as both naive and arrogant? And can this be the same George W. Bush who, during the 2000 presidential campaign, voiced a prudent conservative skepticism about nation-building abroad?
Overpowering Iraq was the easy part. Destruction is simple in principle and America is incomparable at achieving it. But its obvious that raw force has nothing to do with the ability to create and nurture viable institutions. The administration wasnt content with smashing Saddam Husseins regime; it felt it must stick around and take responsibility for the aftermath for as long as it took. Now it expects to develop a new Iraqi political culture in six months.
The sheer economic cost of the occupation has already turned out to be staggering, far beyond the administrations hopeful estimates. Just keeping the water and electricity flowing is a huge job. But transplanting Western-style governance, which is clumsy enough even at home, is more like irrigating the Sahara or heating Antarctica. If youre ambitious enough to try it, youd better not be in a big hurry.
Two years ago a war to end terrorism sounded futile enough. But to this Bush has now added what nobody would have predicted of him: goals that are downright utopian. He makes Woodrow Wilson at Versailles seem like a nuts-and-bolts man. He also inspires nostalgia for his father, who approached the 1991 Iraq war with sharply limited purposes purposes so narrow that they only whetted the appetite of neoconservatives for a bigger and better war in the Middle East.
Unfortunately, those neoconservatives have been leading the younger Bush by the nose. Were now learning what regime change really meant. And learning the hard way.
Sobran makes Robert Novak sound warm and fuzzy.
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wishes, our inclinations, or the dictates of our passions, they cannot alter the state of facts and evidence." - John Adams - |
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A year? The U.S. Constitution was banged out in a couple of months in the summer of 1787. Of course conditions were somewhat different. Not only is the comparison stupid-- it is also dishonest. Why compare Iraq to the States? Why not to the more recent experience with Germany and Japan?
He is against the war and is merely trying to find something to ctiticize, no matter how strnuous that criticism is.
And why must a constitution be written? The two chief allies of the United States, Great Britain and Israel, dont have written constitutions. I am pretty sure he knows the answer: because both the U.K. and Israel are democratic countries, and both peoples have experience with democracies (albeit of different length). Therefore for these countries whether to codify that democracy in the form of a constitution is a question of tactics.
In contrast, Iraqis have no experience with democracy, and the constitution imposed from without is the only way to introduce it at the moment. It is the question of strategy --- even of mission, one could say --- rather than tactics.
I am pretty sure Sobran is smart enough to deduce the aforementioned difference. But he is peddling his agenda, exposing only himself for what a low life he is.
and then hotly, even fiercely debated for over a year before it was finally ratified by the necessary number of states, and even then only under the condition that it be immediately amended to include a Bill of Rights. This was in a country of only 3 million ethnically, and religiously homogeneous people (with the exception of slaves) that was accustomed to representative democracy, that was not experiencing on-going civil strife or suffering the lingering effects of a monstrously tyrannical despot who butchered hundreds of thousands while completely destroying the infrastructure and economy.
About typical for a Joe Sobran article --- Two sentences before a complete misstatement or distortion of fact which he then uses to build a faulty thesis from which to spew his meaningless venom. This guy is the saddest (and most bitter) opinion writer in syndication.
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