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Victor Davis Hanson: Why Democracy? Ten reasons to support democracy in the Middle East
NRO ^ | 2/11/2005 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 02/11/2005 6:30:41 AM PST by Tolik

Democracy is the Middle East’s best--and last--chance.

Neoconservatives hope that a democratic Iraq and Afghanistan can usher in a new age of Middle Eastern consensual government that will cool down a century-old cauldron of hatred. Realists counter that democratic roots will surely starve in sterile Middle East soil, and it is a waste of time to play Wilsonian games with a people full of anti-American hatred who display only ingratitude for the huge investment of American lives and treasure spent on their freedom. Paleoconservatives prefer to spend our treasure here at home, while liberals oppose anything that is remotely connected with George W. Bush or refutes their own utopian notions of a world to be adjudicated by a paternal United Nations. All rightly fear demonocracy — the Arafat or Iranian unconstitutional formula of "one vote, one time."

Yet for all its uncertainties and dangers in the Islamic Arab world, there remain some undeniable facts about democracy across time and space that suggest with effort and sacrifice it can both work in the Middle East and will be in the long-term security interests of the United States. So why exactly should we support the daunting task of democratizing the Middle East and how is it possible?

1. It is widely said that democracies rarely attack other democracies. Thus the more that exist in the world — and at no time in history have there been more such governments than today — the less likely is war itself. That cliché proves, in fact, mostly true. There are gray areas of course in such blanket generalizations: The Confederates, British, Boers, and Prussians all had parliaments of sorts, but were clearly not as democratic as their adversaries in 1861, 1812, 1899, and 1914. While modern forms of democracy are sometimes hard to define, we more or less know them when we see them: All citizens are eligible to vote and hold office, a free press flourishes, and the rule of constitutional law trumps fiat. Thus should Iraq become a true constitutional government, it is less likely to invade a Kuwait, pay subsidies to suicide murderers, send missiles into Israel and Saudi Arabia, or gas its own people.

2. More often than not, democracies arise through violence — either by threat of force or after war with all the incumbent detritus of humiliation, impoverishment, and revolution. The shame of the Falklands debacle brought down the Argentine dictatorship in the same manner that Portugal's imperial disasters in Africa steered it from fascism to republicanism. Japan, Germany, and Italy arose from the ashes of war, as did South Korea and in a sense Taiwan as well.

Most likely Ronald Reagan's arms build-up of the 1980s bankrupted the Soviet Empire and freed both its "republics" and the enslaved states of Eastern Europe. So the birth pangs of democracy are often violent, and we should pay little attention to critics who clamor that the United States cannot prompt reform through regime change. Instead, let skeptical Americans (who were not given their own liberty through debate) adduce evidence that freedom is usually a result of mere petition or always indigenous. Even the Philippines and South Africa were the dividends of diplomatic strong-arming, the cessation of U.S. support, and veiled threats that continued autocracy would lead to disaster.

3. Democracies are more likely to be internally stable, inasmuch as they allow people to take credit and accept blame for their own predicaments. They keep their word, or as Woodrow Wilson once put it, "A steadfast concert for peace can never be maintained except by a partnership of democratic nations."

A Hitler, Mussolini, shah, or Pinochet can hijack for a time weak democracies, but they offered no real improvement and only led the people to disaster. Some in desperation talk of the need for a "good" Saddam-like strongman to knock a few heads in the Sunni Triangle — but that vestigial idea from the Cold War would only bring a few months or years of stability at the price of decades of unrest. Sooner or later every people has a rendezvous with freedom.

4. The democratic idea is contagious. We once worried about the negative Communist domino theory, but the real chain reaction has always been the positive explosion of democracy. Once Epaminondas curbed Spartan autocracy, suddenly Mantinea, Megalopolis, and Messenia went democratic and the entire Peloponnese began to adopt consensual governments. When Portugal and Spain flipped, it had an enormous positive effect on moving change forward in the Spanish-speaking world of Latin America — as liberty spread, once-right-wing Chile and left-wing Nicaragua were freed. The Soviet republics and Eastern European satellites without much warning imploded in succession — more quickly even than the Russians had once enslaved them in the late 1940s.

It is not a neocon pipedream, but historically plausible that a democratic Israel, Palestine, Turkey, Afghanistan, and Iraq can create momentum that Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, and eventually even a Syria or Iran would find hard to resist. Saudi Arabia's ballyhooed liberalization, Mubarak's unease about his successor, Libya's strange antics, Pakistan's revelation about nuclear commerce, and the Gulf States' talk of parliaments did not happen in a vacuum, but are rumblings that follow from fears of voters in Afghanistan and Iraq — and a Mullah Omar dethroned and Saddam's clan either dead or in chains.

5. In the case of the Muslim world, there is nothing inherently incompatible between Islam and democracy. Witness millions in India, Malaysia, Indonesia, and Turkey who vote. Such liberal venting may well explain why those who blow up Americans are rarely Indian or Turkish Muslims, but more likely Saudis or Egyptians. The trick is now to show that Arab Muslims can establish democracy, and thus the Palestine and Iraq experiments are critical to the entire region.

6. Democracy brings moral clarity and cures deluded populaces of their false grievances and exaggerated hurts. The problem in the Middle East is the depressing relationship between autocracies and Islamists: Illiberal governments fault the Americans and Jews for their own failure. Thus in lieu of reform, strongmen deflect popular frustration by allowing the Wahhabis, al Qaedists, and other terrorists to use their state-controlled media likewise to blame us rather than a Mubarak, Saudi Royal Family, or Saddam Hussein. Yet just as crowded Germans today do not talk of the need for lebensraum and resource-less Japanese have dropped dreams of a Greater Co-Prosperity Sphere, so too a democratic Middle East will more likely look inward at tribalism, patriarchy, fundamentalism, religious intolerance, and polygamy rather than automatically at Israel and the United States when their airliners crash or a car bomb goes off.

7. We fret rightly about the spread of weapons of mass destruction. But the truth is that we worry mainly about nukes in the hands of autocracies like China, Iran, or North Korea. No American loses sleep that the UK or France has deadly missiles. A Russia that used to paralyze American foreign policy by virtue of it atomic arsenal poses little threat as long as President Putin can be persuaded not to destroy his consensual government. We should of course try to keep the number of nuclear nations static. Yet the next-best course is to ensure that Pakistan or China can evolve into free societies, and hope that should Iran obtain such weapons, its mullahs can be overthrown and their successors can follow the course of a South Africa whose new democracy dismantled its inherited arsenal. We cannot expect a successful democratic Germany or Japan to sit back and watch criminal states like Iran and North Korea go nuclear without expecting them to do the same — thus the need now to support democratic agitation in Tehran and elsewhere.

8. The promotion of democracy abroad by democracy at home is internally consistent and empowers rather than embarrasses a sponsoring consensual society. All sensible Europeans and Americans eventually ask themselves why freedom is fine for us but not for others. And if the novel orthodoxy of the post-Cold War era demanded that democracies must cease their support for rightist thugs, the subsequent wisdom is that they should be even more muscular, actively supporting democratic change rather than postfacto politely clapping after its establishment.

9. By promoting democracies, Americans can at last come to a reckoning with the Cold War. If it was wrong then to back a shah or Saudi Royal family ("keep the oil flowing and the Commies out") or to abandon Afghanistan after repelling the Soviets, it is surely right now not to repeat the error of realpolitik — especially when there is no longer the understandable excuse of having thousands of Soviet nuclear weapons pointing at the heart of America. Since 1946 the United States has had to check the Soviet Union, attempt to save millions from its state slavery, and then liberate its subjects. That messy and brutal task is mostly accomplished, and now we can at least attempt to provide freedom to those states in the past we once neglected.

10. Like it or not, a growing consensus has emerged that consumer capitalism and democracy are the only ways to organize society. We are not at the end of history yet — wars and revolutions may well plague us for decades. But if we cannot achieve universal democracy, we can at least get near enough to envision it. I doubt whether George Bush's vision of ending tyranny in our lifetime is possible, but he is to be congratulated for grasping that in our lifetime most of the world agrees that it should be. The Arab world so far has missed the bus of history. The success of democratic reform in parts of Africa, Latin America, and Asia is a daily reminder of the decades lost in the Middle East, and how endemic Arab envy, jealousy, and excuses — which so repel or bore the world — can be ameliorated only by a new maturity and responsibility that are the wages of democratic government.

Democracy is not faultless. The Left sees it as selfish individualism at the expense of equality of result — a desired egalitarianism that can only be achieved by undemocratic government coercion. The extreme Right at best sees democracy as a devolving concept of dumbing society down to its lowest common element — Plato's notion that eventually even the animals would be given equality — as a prelude to the rule of the rabble.

In response, our politicians and pundits constantly try to fine-tune democracy, to tinker with voting, redistribute wealth, turn to legislative plebiscites, gerrymander, and use the courts to trump popular sovereignty. Ancient political thinkers likewise bickered in their definition of democracy, and provided unworkable typologies that ranged from oligarchic republicanism to mob rule.

Democracy was not our first, but rather out last choice in the Middle East. For decades we have promoted Cold War realpolitik and supported thugs whose merit was simply that they were not as bad as a murderous Saddam or Assad (true enough), while the Arab world has gone from kings and dictators to Soviet puppets, Pan-Arabists, Islamists, and theocrats. Democracy in some sense is the last chance. It alone offers constitutional guarantees of free speech, minority rights, and an independent judiciary — a framework, a system, a paradigm in which naturally savage humans, prone to all sorts of awful things, as the 20th county attests, can somehow get along. Given the savagery of the modern Middle East that would say quite a lot.

Victor Davis Hanson is a military historian and a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University. His website is victorhanson.com.

 


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: arabworld; democracy; iraqidemocracy; middleeast; mustbefriday; vdh; victordavishanson
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To: FreedomPoster

"And the Japanese did, in 1945?"

Do you think Japanese and Arab/Islamic culture are remotely similar? Japanese culture was more modern and advanced in the nineteenth century than Arab/Islamic culture is today.


21 posted on 02/11/2005 2:42:31 PM PST by monday
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To: monday
Not to mention Japan held elections on their own in the 1920's!

During the Meji restoration in the 1800's Japan sent out students and scholars to learn and absorb Western Culture. The Japanese had an interests in moving into the future.

22 posted on 02/11/2005 5:36:05 PM PST by M 91 u2 K (Kahane was Right!)
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To: monday


Perhaps you are wrong.


from the Washington Times
http://insider.washingtontimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20050227-123307-3036r


First Syria announces Lebanon pullout. Now Egypt announces democratic reform. Looks like the Bush doctrine has caused a Middle Eastern tidal wave.

from the Washington Times, best paper in the US.
http://insider.washingtontimes.com/articles/normal.php?StoryID=20050227-123307-3036r
Egypt eyes reform for fall election
By Tanalee Smith
ASSOCIATED PRESS
From the World section
CAIRO -- Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak, in a surprise reversal, yesterday took a significant step toward democratic reform in the world's most populous Arab country by ordering that presidential challengers be allowed on the ballot this fall.
The opposition long had demanded an open election, but Egypt's ruling party repeatedly had rejected it.
The Egyptian president, who has held power since 1981 without facing an election opponent, only last month dismissed calls for reform as "futile."
Mr. Mubarak made the announcement in a nationally televised speech, surprising even some in his inner circle, one source close to the presidency said.
Touting "freedom and democracy," Mr. Mubarak told an audience at Menoufia University, north of Cairo, that he had instructed parliament and the consultative Shura Council to amend the constitution's Article 76 on presidential elections.
The changes would set a direct vote "giving the chance for political parties to run" and "providing guarantees that allow more than one candidate for the people to choose among them," Mr. Mubarak said.
His audience broke into applause. "Long live Mubarak, mentor of freedom and democracy," some shouted, while others recited verses of poetry praising the government.
Mr. Mubarak's sudden shift was the first sign from Egypt, a key U.S. ally, that it was ready to participate in the democratic evolution in the Middle East, in particular historic elections in Iraq and the Palestinian territories that followed balloting in Afghanistan.
Mr. Mubarak faced increasingly vocal opposition at home and growing friction with the United States over the lack of reform.


23 posted on 02/27/2005 6:19:46 AM PST by strategofr (Egypt moves toward democracy)
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To: strategofr
"Perhaps you are wrong."

Perhaps, but I doubt it. The only reason the majority of middle eastern countries aren't Islamic theocracies similar to Iran is because there are very few truly democratic governments over there.

In Egypt, Morocco, even Turkey, Islamic parties would win if allowed to participate in the election. Saudi Arabia would have an Islamic terrorist government if it's citizens were allowed to choose their own government. Once an Islamic theocracy wins of course, that is the end of democracy, because democracy is not allowed under Sharia law.

Ironically, only Iran is ready for true democratic reform because people there have been living under the corrupt and reactionary rule of an Islamic theocracy for a generation. They are the only people in the middle east to realize how bad it is. They are also culturally more sophisticated than Arabs. A little any way.

Given a few more years, the tide of public opinion in Iran may cause the first and only true democratic reform in the middle east.

I am always amused that so many Americans think that all that is necessary to bring peace and freedom to the middle east is democratic reform. It is impossible to bring peace and freedom to people who would vote to live under tyrants.
24 posted on 02/28/2005 6:51:43 AM PST by monday
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To: monday
Good points. In regard to Turkey, the question seems to have a little "nuance" (not that I'm a John Kerry fan, the opposite, but the word still has meaning.)

The people of Turkey are not, as you imply free to elect an Islamic gov't, as that is illegal, I believe. However, they have elected a party led by someone who, until recently, was banned from political participation due to being considered a "militant Islamacist," or some similar designation.

In this case, the truth of the charge is not completely clear. He did read a poem with violent religious overtones, but what else he did I don't know, as news reports give that as the sole reason for his banning. Now he is in charge, and claims to have "reformed" in this regard.

Despite the ambiguity, I'll concede that the Turkish situation supports your point---the people seem to want to elect a religious gov't and came as close as they could under the current system.

I agree with you about Iran. Yes, it's ironic. Similar to former communist countries, by analogy.

Iran, due to the combination of nukes and missiles, is the most critical at the moment. I think perhaps we should "help along" the process you refer to (the movement toward democracy) with some covert supplying of weapons. What do you think?

A leaked report on covert US operations in Iran in the New Yorker (by an unreliable writer, Seymour Hirsch, unconfirmed and quite possibly fabricated) said we already have Seals, CIA guys or what-have-you in Iran, and that among other things, they are gathering info on Iranian nuclear installations. Maybe this could be combined with providing aid to the revolution, a tit for tat.

The Iranian democrats (supposedly) support a US invasion, and therefore should support efforts to thwart the development of a mullah nuclear deterrent.
25 posted on 02/28/2005 5:56:00 PM PST by strategofr (Egypt moves toward democracy)
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To: strategofr

"I think perhaps we should "help along" the process you refer to (the movement toward democracy) with some covert supplying of weapons."

Check out this link. It has some ideas that actual Iranians think we should do to help.

http://www.faithfreedom.org/Announcement/502251920.htm


26 posted on 02/28/2005 8:08:00 PM PST by monday
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To: monday
Nice link! One problem with this situation is that many analysts seem to be unsure of the true sentiment of the "Iranian people." What percentage oppose the mullahs?

If opposition is broad enough, I have thought that we should, before any potential invasion, simply parachute box-fulls of M-16s over the whole country. There is probably a better way to do it, based on some kind of infiltration by special forces.

Then maybe throw in some armored thrusts. Try to coordinate the rebels via our own special forces guys, in radio communication with US forces.

Realistically, we would have to raise the Iraqi army to the level of controlling most of Iraq first, to free up the forces.

It all hinges on a very strong positive response from the Iranian people. However, this does not seem assured. Obviously, we are gun-shy after Iraq. I realize the 2 countries are different, but caution still is there.

One hopeful sign is that I believe the CIA is being cleaned up, at least to an extent, under the new director. Theoretically, the same could happen at State. These are our eyes and ears, but they have functioned so badly, we have been deaf and blind. The military, not trusting State and the CIA, has relied on its own intelligence. This is inadequate (the military lacks the right capability for political assessment.)

Recently, I heard Joel Mowbray interviewed on the radio. His book, Dangerous Diplomacy, Regnery, 2003, is the definitive modern classic on the disaster at State, as far as I know.

He said that the person who had been brought in to reform the Visa Express program two years ago had been told by Condi Rice that her job would be extended "indefinitely". This was the program that let in 3 of the 9-11 terrorists from Saudi Arabia (p.3 Dangerous Diplomacy).

The person that set that program up and maintained it unchanged, basically after 9-11 was let go, but her predecessor had done nothing (apparently) in the last 2 years. Mowbray (on the radio) was quite upset to heat that Rice told her she could stay.

So hopefully this incident was an aberration and Rice will clean house at State. I like Rice's thinking, but fear if she is tough enough for this cleanup job at State.
27 posted on 03/01/2005 9:55:31 AM PST by strategofr (Egypt moves toward democracy)
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To: strategofr
"So hopefully this incident was an aberration and Rice will clean house at State. I like Rice's thinking, but fear if she is tough enough for this cleanup job at State."

No one can clean up the state department. The reason is that employees cannot be fired for any reason. It is the same with all government jobs. The employees unions have made firing anyone, even for criminal behavior, next to impossible.

The other problem is that long ago intellectual elitists took over the state department and they are in charge of all hiring. Since they are all Ivy League socialists, they only hire other Ivy League socialists.

Political appointees like Rice come and go, but they have little or no effect on institutionalized bureaucracies like the State Department.
28 posted on 03/01/2005 10:46:31 AM PST by monday
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To: M 91 u2 K
During the Meji restoration in the 1800's Japan sent out students and scholars to learn and absorb Western Culture. The Japanese had an interests in moving into the future.

"Boys, Be Ambitious!"

The Japanese imported scholars also, such as William Clark Smith in 1876.

29 posted on 03/01/2005 11:02:59 AM PST by snowsislander
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To: monday
Your points are valid and telling. However, there is a high level of employees (even at State) that are appointees, I'm pretty sure. These need to be cleaned out wholesale, quickly.

The deeper problem you refer to is disastrous and must be addressed by new laws. Unfortunately, we first have to educate the American public about the problem to generate pressure for such. Which, in our infinitesimal way, we are doing here now.

Mowbray does address these problems, to an extent, in Dangerous Diplomacy.
30 posted on 03/03/2005 4:32:00 PM PST by strategofr (Egypt moves toward democracy)
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