http://www.danielpipes.org/article/2479

Can Hezbollah and Hamas Be Democratic?
by Daniel Pipes
New York Sun
March 22, 2005

http://www.nysun.com/article/10925
[Original NY Sun title: "Methods Matter Less Than Goals"]

If Al-Qaeda renounced terrorism, would the U.S. government welcome its
running candidates in American elections? Had the Nazis denounced
violence, would Hitler have become an acceptable chancellor for
Germany? Not likely, because the tactics of Al-Qaeda and the Nazis
matter less than their goals.

Similarly, Hezbollah and Hamas are unacceptable because of their
goals. These organizations are important elements of the Islamist
movement that seeks to create a global totalitarian order along the
lines of what has already been created in Iran, Sudan, and in
Afghanistan under the Taliban. They see themselves as part of a cosmic
clash between Muslims and the West in which the victor dominates the
world.

Washington, trying to be consistent in its push for democracy, prefers
to ignore these goals and instead endorses involvement by Hezbollah
and Hamas in the political process, pending their making some small
changes.

These signals began last week when President Bush stated that although
Hezbollah, a Lebanese group, is "a terrorist organization," he hopes
it will change that designation "by laying down arms and not
threatening peace." White House spokesman Scott McClellan then
elaborated on this comment by specifying the two alternatives:
"Organizations like Hezbollah have to choose, either you're a
terrorist organization or you're a political organization."

Bush himself explained further what he meant a day later, presenting
elections as a method to shed the terrorist designation:

I like the idea of people running for office. There's a positive
effect when you run for office. Maybe some will run for office and
say, vote for me, I look forward to blowing up America. I don't know,
I don't know if that will be their platform or not. But I don't think
so. I think people who generally run for office say, vote for me, I'm
looking forward to fixing your potholes, or making sure you got bread
on the table.

Hamas a Palestinian organization, Secretary of State Rice then noted,
could also evolve in the right direction once it enters the democratic
process:

When people start getting elected and have to start worrying about
constituencies and have to start worrying not about whether their
fire-breathing rhetoric against Israel is being heard, but about
whether or not that person's child down the street is able to go to a
good school or that road has been fixed or life is getting better,
that things start to change.

The theory implied here is that running for office � with its emphasis
on such mundane matters as fixing potholes and providing good schools
� will temper Hezbollah and Hamas.

Count me skeptical.

The historical record does not support such optimism. When politically
adept totalitarians win power democratically, they do fix potholes and
improve schools � but only as a means to transform their countries in
accordance with their utopian visions. This generalization applies
most clearly to the historical cases (Adolf Hitler in Germany after
1933, Salvador Allende in Chile after 1970) but it also appears valid
for the current ones (Khaleda Zia in Bangladesh since 2001, Recep
Tayyip Erdoğan in Turkey since 2002).


Then there is the matter of their undemocratic intentions. Josef
Goebbels explained in 1935 that the Nazis used democratic methods
"only in order" to gain power. Looking at Islamists, then-assistant
secretary of state for the Middle East Edward Djerejian explained in
1992, "While we believe in the principle of `one person, one vote,' we
do not support `one person, one vote, one time'." Khomeini's Iran
indicates that Islamists do manipulate elections to stay in power.
Washington should take a principled stand that excludes from the
democratic process not just terrorists but also totalitarians using
the system to get into power and stay there. It is not enough for
Islamist organizations to renounce violence; being irredeemably
autocratic, they must be excluded from elections.


In a famed Supreme Court dissent in 1949, the eminent justice Robert
H. Jackson argued for the arrest of a neo-Nazi rabble-rouser in
Chicago on the grounds that not doing so "will convert the
constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide pact." The same
imperative for self-protection applies also to international politics.
Even if Hezbollah and Hamas promise a change in tactics, America � or
for that matter, Israel and other Western states � should not accept
them as legitimate political parties.









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