http://msnbc.msn.com/id/11182278/
 
Islam and Power 
Is President Bush's plan to spread democracy turning into a fiasco? It
doesn't have to. But it does need to change.
By Fareed Zakaria <http://msnbc.msn.com/id/4917093/site/newsweek/> 
Newsweek
Feb. 13, 2006 issue - George W. Bush is not a man for second thoughts, but
even he might have had some recently. Ever since 9/11, Bush has made the
promotion of democracy in the Middle East the center-piece of his foreign
policy, and doggedly pushed the issue. Over the last few months, however,
this approach has borne strange fruit, culminating in Hamas's victory in
Gaza and the West Bank. Before that, we have watched it strengthen Hizbullah
in Lebanon, which (like Hamas) is often described in the West as a terrorist
organization. In Iraq, the policy has brought into office conservative
religious parties with their own private militias. In Egypt, it has
bolstered the Muslim Brotherhood, one of the oldest fundamentalist
organizations in the Arab world, from which Al Qaeda descends. "Democracies
replace resentment with hope, respect the rights of their citizens and their
neighbors, and join the fight against terror," Bush said last week in his
State of the Union address. But is this true of the people coming to power
in the Arab world today?
This is an issue that deserves serious thought, well beyond pointing to the
awkwardness of Bush's position. Bush's prescription is, after all, one
accepted by many governments: it is also European policy to push for
democratic reform in the Middle East. And in fact, little has happened over
the last few months that makes the case for continued support of Muslim
dictatorships. But recent events do powerfully suggest that if we don't
better understand the history, culture and politics of the countries that we
are "reforming," we will be in for an extremely rocky ride.
There is a tension in the Islamic world between the desire for democracy and
a respect for liberty. (It is a tension that once raged in the West and
still exists in pockets today.) This is most apparent in the ongoing fury
over the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad in a small Danish
newspaper. The cartoons were offensive and needlessly provocative. Had the
paper published racist caricatures of other peoples or religions, it would
also have been roundly condemned and perhaps boycotted. But the cartoonist
and editors would not have feared for their lives. It is the violence of the
response in some parts of the Muslim world that suggests a rejection of the
ideas of tolerance and freedom of expression that are at the heart of modern
Western societies.
Why are all these strains rising now? Islamic fundamentalism was supposed to
be on the wane. Five years ago the best scholars of the phenomenon were
writing books with titles like "The Failure of Political Islam." Observers
pointed to the exhaustion of the Iranian revolution, the ebbing of support
for radical groups from Algeria to Egypt to Saudi Arabia. And yet one sees
political Islam on the march across the Middle East today. Were we all
wrong? Has Islamic fundamentalism gotten a second wind?
There are those who argue that the collapse of the Arab-Israeli peace
process, the war on terror, and the bloodshed in Afghanistan and Iraq have
all contributed to the idea that Islam is under siege-providing radicals
with fresh ammunition. This is not, however, a wholly convincing case. For
one thing, opposition to the Iraq war is not a radical phenomenon in the
Middle East, but rather an utterly mainstream one. Almost every government
opposed it. Moreover, the rise and fall of Islamic fundamentalism was a
broad and deep phenomenon, born over decades. It could hardly reverse itself
on the basis of a year's news. Does anyone believe that if there had been no
Iraq war, Hamas would have lost? Or that the Danish cartoons would have been
published with no response?
The political Islamist movement has changed over the last 15 years. Through
much of the 1980s and 1990s, Islamic fundamentalists had revolutionary aims.
They sought the violent overthrow of Western-allied regimes to have them
replaced with Islamic states. This desire for Islamic states and not
Western-style democracies was at the core of their message. Often
transnational in their objectives, they spoke in global terms. But it turned
out that the appeal of this ideology was limited. People in Algeria, Egypt,
Saudi Arabia and countless other places rejected it; in fact, they
grudgingly accepted the dictatorships they lived under rather than support
violent extremism. In this sense, political Islam did fail.
But over time, many of the Islamists recognized this reality and began
changing their program. They came to realize that shorn of violent
overthrow, revolution and social chaos, their ideas could actually gain
considerable popular support. So they reinvented themselves, emphasizing not
revolutionary overthrow but peaceful change, not transnational ideology but
national reform. They were still protesting the dictators, but now they
organized demonstrations in favor of democracy and honest politics.
There were extremist elements, of course, still holding true to the cause of
the caliphate, and they broke off to create separate groups like Al Qaeda.
(Some of this radicalism remains within the diaspora communities of Europe
more strongly than in the Middle East itself.) But it is notable that well
before 9/11, Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood condemned terrorism directed against
the Mubarak regime, and it recently distanced itself even from the tactics
of the Iraqi insurgency. It has sought instead to build support for its own
social and political program in Egypt. For its part, not only did Hamas
decide to participate in the elections-for the first time-but it campaigned
almost entirely on a platform of anticorruption, social services and
assertive nationalism. Only Al Qaeda and its ilk have condemned any
participation in elections, whether by Iraqi Islamist groups or by Hamas.
This coming to terms with democracy, however, should not be mistaken for a
coming to terms with Western values such as liberalism, tolerance and
freedom. The program that most of these groups espouse is deeply illiberal,
involving the reversal of women's rights, second-class citizenship for
minorities and confrontation with the West and Israel. The most dramatic
example of these trends is in southern Iraq, where Shiite religious parties
rule without any checks. Reports abound that civil servants and professors
are subjected to religious and political tests, women are placed under
strictures never before enforced in Iraq, and all kinds of harmless
entertainment are being silenced by vigilantes. When entering the office of
Iraq's prime minister, Ibrahim Jaafari, one now sees women swaddled in veils
and gloves, a level of zeal rarely seen elsewhere in the Muslim world.
Some of these forces have gained strength because of a lack of other
alternatives. For decades the Middle East has been a political desert. In
Iraq, the reason that there are no countervailing liberal parties is that
Saddam Hussein destroyed them. He could not completely crush mosque-based
groups and, by the end of his reign, he actually used them to shore up his
own legitimacy. In much of the Muslim world Islam became the language of
political opposition because it was the only language that could not be
censored. This pattern, of dictators using religious groups to destroy the
secular opposition, played itself out in virtually every Arab country, and
often beyond. It was the method by which Pakistan's Gen. Zia ul-Haq
maintained his own dictatorship in the 1980s, creating a far stronger
fundamentalist movement than that country had ever known.
The broader reason for the rise of Islamic politics has been the failure of
secular politics. Secularism exists in the Middle East. It is embodied by
Saddam Hussein and Muammar Kaddafi and Hosni Mubarak and Yasir Arafat. Arabs
believe that they have tried Western-style politics and it has brought them
tyranny and stagnation. They feel that they got a bastardized version of the
West and that perhaps the West was not the right model for them anyway.
Islamic fundamentalism plays deeply to these feelings. It evokes
authenticity, pride, cultural assertiveness and defiance. These ideas have
been powerful sources of national identity throughout history and remain so,
especially in an age of globalized economics and American power. In face of
the powerlessness, alienation and confusion that the modern world breeds,
these groups say simply, "Islam is the solution."
Inevitably we have to ask ourselves what to do about these movements that
are rising to power. The first task is surely to understand them-understand
that they thrive on pride and a search for authenticity. These forces play
themselves out in complex ways. It is obvious by now that the United
States-and Europe as well-understand countries like Iraq and Iran very
little. In Iraq, the United States overturned old social structures and
governing patterns with little thought as to what would replace them. We
believed that democracy and freedom would solve the problems of disorder,
division and dysfunction.
Or consider Iran. Many Americans had become convinced that the vast majority
of Iranians hated their regime and were trying desperately to overthrow it;
all we needed to do was help them foment a revolution. There's little doubt
that the regime is brutal and unpopular. But it also appears to have some
basis of support, in mosques, patronage systems and poorer parts of the
country. And those who do not support it are not automatically Western
liberals. After all, there was an election in Iran and, despite low turnout,
the eventual vote was free and secret. (Back when the winner of Iranian
elections was a liberal, Mohammed Khatami, people often cited the vote as
proof that the fundamentalists were failing.) Five candidates took part in
the most recent race. The pro-Western liberal came in fifth; the
conservative West-basher came in first.
My own guess, and it is just a guess, is that some Iranians-not a majority,
but not a tiny minority, either-accept their current regime. This is partly
because of its ideology and patronage politics, and partly because of
general inertia. (We have only to look at Iraq to see that Shiite religious
figures do have some hold on their populations.) Add to this an apparatus of
repression and $60-a-barrel oil and you have a regime that has many ways to
stay in power. President Ahmadinejad understands these forces. He emphasizes
in his daily television appearances not Islamic dogma but poverty
alleviation, subsidies, anti-corruption projects and, above all, nationalism
in the form of the nuclear program. Ahmadinejad may be a mystic, but most of
his actions are those of a populist, using the forces that will work to keep
him in power. This picture of Iran, gray and complex, is much less
satisfying than the black-and-white caricature. But it might be closer to
the truth.
Elections have not created political Islam in the Middle East. They have
codified a reality that existed anyway. Hamas was already a major player to
be reckoned with in Gaza. The Muslim Brotherhood is popular in Egypt,
whether or not Hosni Mubarak holds real elections. In fact, the more they
are suppressed, the greater their appeal. If politics is more open, these
groups may or may not moderate themselves, but they will surely lose some of
that mystical allure they now have. The martyrs will become mayors, which is
quite a fall in status.
But to accept these forces is not to celebrate them. It is important that
religious intolerance and antimodern attitudes not be treated as cultural
variations that must be respected. Whether it is Hindu intolerance in India,
anti-Semitism in Europe or Muslim bigotry in Saudi Arabia, the modern world
rightly condemns them all as violating universal values. Recent months have
only highlighted that promoting democracy and promoting liberty in the
Middle East are separate projects. Both have their place. But the
latter-promoting the forces of political, economic and social liberty-is the
more difficult and more important task. And unless we succeed at it, we will
achieve a series of nasty democratic outcomes, as we are beginning to in so
many of these places.
This fight is not one the fundamentalists are destined to win. The forces of
liberalism have been stymied in the Middle East for decades. They need help.
Recall that in Europe for much of the last 100 years, when liberal democrats
were not given assistance, nationalists and communists often triumphed
through the democratic processes.
Above all, the forces of moderation thrive in an atmosphere of success. Two
Muslim societies in which there is little extremism are Turkey and Malaysia.
Both are open politically and thriving economically. Compare Pakistan
today-growing at 8 percent a year-with General Zia's country, and you can
see why, for all the noise, fundamentalism there is waning. If you are
comfortable with the modern world, you are less likely to want to blow it
up.
There are better and worse ways to handle radical Islam. We should not feed
the fury that helps them win adherents. The Bush administration's arrogance
has been a great boon to the nastiest groups in the Middle East, which are
seen as the only ones who can stand up to the imperial bully. We should
recognize how varied these groups are: some violent, others not, some truly
anti-modern, others not-and work to divide rather than unite them. When, for
example, Bush added Chechen brutalities to his list of crimes of "radical
Islam," he made a mistake. Russia has waged a horrific war against Chechnya
for two decades, killing more than 100,000 civilians. To speak of that
conflict in the same breath as the London bombings, as Bush did, is to
suggest that any time a Muslim kills, whatever the provocation, it's all the
same to him.
Give Bush his due. He has correctly and powerfully argued that blind
assistance to the dictatorships of the Middle East was a policy that was
producing repression and instability. But he has not yet found a way to
genuinely assist in the promotion of political, economic and social reforms
in the region. A large part of the problem is that the United States-and the
West in general-are not seen as genuine well-wishers and allies of the
peoples of these countries in their aspirations for a better life. We have
stopped partnering with repressive Middle Eastern regimes, but we have not
yet managed to forge a real partnership with Middle Eastern societies. 


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