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http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/commentary/la-oe-ledeen13apr13,0,671492
6.story

COMMENTARY
Say You Want a Revolution

Change needs help from its friends.

By Peter Ackerman and Michael Ledeen

Peter Ackerman is chairman of the International Center for Nonviolent
Conflict. Michael Ledeen is a resident scholar at the American Enterprise
Institute.

April 13, 2005

In recent months, skepticism about the appeal of freedom has given way to a
new belief: that democratic revolution is now possible, even inevitable, in
places such as Lebanon, Iran, Syria and Kyrgyzstan. But "people power" is
not an unstoppable tidal wave, and it would be wrong and naive to conclude
that we need only step back and let it happen. The Western world has a lot
at stake, and our support for democratic forces in the Middle East and
beyond will be important, perhaps even decisive.

Freedom-loving people know what we want to see in Beirut, Damascus and
Tehran: the central square bursting with citizens demanding an end to
tyranny, massive strikes shutting down the national economy, the
disintegration of security forces charged with maintaining order, and the
consequent departure of the tyrants and the beginnings of a popularly
elected government.

A successful people's revolution is the outcome of careful planning and
mass discipline, but it requires political and economic support from
outside the country — and maybe some from within.

There are three indispensable requirements: first, a unified opposition
that can put aside internal disagreements over the details of what will
follow the downfall of the tyrannical regime; second, a disciplined
democratic movement that rigorously applies the rules of nonviolent
conflict; and finally, careful preparation of the battlefield — which means
that members of the armed forces must be persuaded to make individual
decisions rather than act as part of a collective organization.

If the opposition is not unified, the regime will be able to break it apart
by making deals with its component parts. If discipline is not maintained,
violence will break out and the regime, which has more weapons than the
opposition, will probably prevail. If members of the security forces are
threatened as a group, they will be more likely to maintain a collective
identity rather than joining the revolution individually.

In Iran and Lebanon, and probably in Syria, the prerequisites for
democratic revolution are in place. Opposition groups in Iran are united in
their call for free elections, perhaps preceded by a national referendum
that will either legitimize or reject the theocratic state. In Lebanon, 1
million people just demonstrated their support for the quick removal of the
Syrian occupiers.

Now the West needs to help. The lessons learned in Georgia and Ukraine need
to be passed along. Indeed, this information is so important that Western
governments should provide funding so that it can be broadcast around the
clock.

The activists will need to communicate with one another, and the West can
provide them with suitable equipment — satellite phones, text messaging,
laptops and servers — that they may not be able to get by themselves. Just
as the West provided Solidarity and Soviet dissidents with fax machines
during the Cold War, we should help contemporary dissidents get the best
tools available.

The people using nonviolent tactics — sit-ins, blockades and strikes, along
with protests — must include workers, shopkeepers, and others who, unlike
students, have their livelihoods at risk. They will be reluctant to walk
off their jobs unless they know their families will not starve as a result.
The West should follow Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini's example: In the months
leading up to his seizure of power in 1979 he smuggled thousands of sacks
of rice into Iran to feed his supporters.

Finally, outsiders seeking to aid democratic revolutions must remember
this: Only indigenous forces can be the prime movers. There must be no
replay of 1953 in Iran, when the United States and Britain stage-managed
mass demonstrations against the government in order to restore the shah to
his throne. We must trust the judgment of the people who are, in all cases,
the foundation of lasting change.

If they want open support, they should get it. If they want it delivered
discreetly, donors should respect their wishes.

Americans, Europeans and others who freely choose their own rulers cannot
be indifferent about the success or failure of democratic revolution around
the world, and we must not limit our support to rhetoric. There is every
reason to believe that this latest surge of revolution will succeed,
provided that the courage and passion of the people of the region receive
suitable assistance from the democratic world.

 

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