-Caveat Lector-

http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Middle_East/DI28Ak02.html

Bush shoots his Weapon of Mass Democracy
By Jim Lobe

WASHINGTON - The normally cool - if not coldly analytical - Anthony
Cordesman was uncharacteristically heated as he warmed to his subject. "It
may be excusable as a fantasy of some Israelis reacting to the trauma of the
second Intifada. As American policy, however, it crosses the line between
neo-conservative and neo-crazy."

Cordesman, a Mideast specialist at the conservative Center for Strategic and
International Studies (CSIS) in Washington, was speaking about the latest
rationale offered with increasing insistence by forces both within the
administration of President George W Bush and outside it for invading Iraq:
the notion that ousting President Saddam Hussein would result in a
flourishing of democracy, not just in Iraq, but through the entire Middle
East.

Hailed by some commentators as the new "Wilsonian" thrust of Bush's foreign
policy, the idea has been gradually embraced by the administration itself.
Just last week, Bush's national security adviser, Condoleezza Rice, told the
Financial Times that the US military should be seen as "liberators" when it
moves on Iraq, and that the administration was devoted to "democratization,
or the march of freedom in the Muslim world". Vice President Dick Cheney has
said much the same thing in recent weeks.

The idea is meant above all to appeal to the more idealistic instincts of
the US public. In that respect, it counter-balances the arguably baser
reasons that have been more frequently invoked by leaders to justify waging
war on a foreign country and ousting its leader: that Saddam has the means,
and the intent, to launch a devastating nuclear, biological or chemical
attack on the United States at any moment, or, in a more sinister vein, that
he is the secret puppeteer behind Osama bin Laden and al-Qaeda.

The Wilsonian rationale, which takes its name from former president Woodrow
Wilson - ironically a champion of international law whose aim in World War I
was to "make the world safe for democracy" - has been championed almost
since last year's September 11 terrorist attacks by a small group of
neo-conservatives with close ties to the right-wing Likud Party in Israel.

The group, which is concentrated at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI),
a major think tank whose ranks include, among others, Cheney's wife Lynne
and the chairman of Pentagon chief Donald Rumsfeld's Defense Policy Board,
Richard Perle, has long argued for extending the war on terrorism far beyond
Afghanistan and al-Qaeda to Iraq, Iran, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestine
Authority of Yasser Arafat and even Washington's long-time ally, Saudi
Arabia.

"What [the Bush administration] has in mind is a broad vision," says Meyrav
Wurmser, who directs Mideast policy at the Hudson Institute but works
closely with Perle, "which really involves changing the character of the
Middle East."

If Saddam can be overthrown in an overwhelming show of force, the argument
goes, then all of the autocracies that have dominated the Arab world,
resisting democratic reform and peace with Israel, will themselves totter
and collapse to popular pressures, creating a domino effect from Iran in the
east, clear across North Africa as far as Libya.

The idea has been strongly embraced by Israel's Likud. In testimony before
Congress two weeks ago, for example, former prime minister Binyamin
Netanyahu waxed eloquent for hours before a mostly fawning group of
lawmakers. "So I think that the choice of going after Iraq is like removing
a brick that holds a lot of other bricks and might cause this structure to
crumble," he said, focusing particularly on Iran, which he said was ready
for a new revolution.

The former prime minister, a frequent guest at AEI, even cited the great
German philosopher Immanuel Kant to support his view that an
across-the-board democratization of the region was the only way to guarantee
peace between Israel and its neighbors.

Netanyahu's focus on Iran as the next target for the war on terror echoed
the views of Perle's AEI colleague Michael Ledeen, once an anti-terrorism
adviser to the administration of former president Ronald Reagan, who helped
broker the original arms-for-weapons deal that underpinned what became the
Iran-Contra affair.

Since the Teheran government was rocked by spontaneous protests one year
ago, Ledeen has repeatedly written that Iran is ripe for a pro-US
revolution, even suggesting in newspaper articles this month that Iran might
even precede Iraq as a target, presumably for covert action.

"With a triumph in Iran, the democratic revolution would quickly gain allies
in Syria and Iraq and transform our war against Saddam Hussein from a
primarily military operation to a war of national liberation against a hated
regime. This war cannot be limited to national theaters," cautioned Ledeen,
who is also a founder and board member of another neo-conservative group,
the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs.

"We face a regional challenge and must respond accordingly. We are the one
truly revolutionary country on earth, which is both the reason for which we
were attacked in the first place and the reason we will successfully
transform the lives of millions of people throughout the Middle East."

What makes this ambition and line of reasoning so interesting is not only
its origin among outspoken "Likudniks" who have long opposed not only the
Oslo accords but the whole "land for peace" formula that has formed the
basis of US Mideast policy since 1967. It is also the contrast between the
hopes expressed on behalf of the Arabs and Muslims who are supposed to
benefit from this policy and the contempt in which the same beneficiaries
are held by their self-described champions.

Another AEI scholar, former CIA officer Reuel Marc Gerecht, who takes the
same line on democratization, has repeatedly argued that power and force are
the only language understood in the Muslim world. Months ago, for example,
as Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon moved to re-occupy West Bank towns
and cities, Gerecht exulted, "The tougher Sharon becomes, the stronger our
image will be in the Middle East."

Netanyahu echoed that view before Congress: the political culture in the
region's societies "is not one of respecting force; it is worshipping force,
and the determination, resolution of the United States in applying it".

This, indeed, may be the other side of the democratization coin, according
to a number of observers. There is "something hypocritical about the belief
in democratization when it is expounded by people who also hold the belief
in the clash of civilizations, who were insisting a few months ago that
there are regions of the world, particularly the Islamic regions, in which
culture makes freedom impossible", noted the normally neo-conservative New
Republic recently.

As for Cordesman and other Mideast experts, both the people who now champion
democratization as the rationale for war against Iraq and the vehemence with
which they continue to attack Arab and Islamic societies "threaten to turn
'democratization' into a four-letter word".

(Inter Press Service)

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