http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/734/op8.htm
17 - 23 March 2005
Issue No. 734
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875    


On democracy
Democracy in the West can survive without democrats. Not here, though, says 
Azmi Bishara 





In the heat of the debate over democracy as a function of the domestic-foreign 
dialectic we sometimes lose sight of the essential distinction between the 
process of building democracy and the process of its self-regeneration once it 
has taken root and begun to flourish. 

One of the factors that work to blur this distinction is that democracy has 
reached us after several centuries of evolution. This has led some to imagine 
that democratisation no longer entails the labour of laying the necessary 
groundwork for the political infrastructures and economic mechanisms necessary 
for its daily reproduction, as though democracy is a question of switching to 
the latest government software programme and all you have to do is pick it off 
the shelf, take it home and press "install". 

On the other hand, the fact that democracy has reached us in its current stage 
of evolution rules out the possibility of returning to square one, restricting 
the right to vote to a narrow elite and then gradually expanding the franchise 
to all adult citizens, as occurred in Western democracies. It is impossible to 
contemplate democracy today without universal suffrage extended even to the 
non-democratically minded and with rights and civil liberties enjoyed even by 
anti-liberal forces. 

But while not acting as though democracy were the latest consumer craze, we 
should simultaneously not pretend that we have no previous store of experience 
to build on. The era of Arab liberalism between the two world wars was not all 
corruption and collusion with colonialism. Nor was the radical Arab nationalism 
of the 1950s and 1960s a complete series of blunders. Those non-democratic 
regimes did have some democratic facets: the masses were brought on board the 
political process, they were given access to public education and they were led 
to believe in and aspire to equality and social justice. 

In fact, the non-fulfilment of the latter expectation led to the rise of 
non-democratic movements; indeed, to anti-modernist fundamentalism, often in 
conjunction with the ruralisation of cities incapable of absorbing the vast 
influx of migrants into urban mass culture. 

But even if frustrated, the aspirations raised by the populist movements of the 
1950s and 1960s have become ingrained in mass culture, and today's advocates of 
democracy can draw on this and, simultaneously, draw inspiration from the fact 
that those pioneering freedom fighters were at least sincere in their belief in 
freedom, equality and the power of the people.

Certainly, the more repugnant manifestations of the way in which universal 
suffrage in the West has blended with mass communications and mass culture have 
driven many of today's youth to despair of politics and seek meaning for their 
lives in other domains. Politics in democratic societies has become associated 
with images of political party intrigue, dirty tricks and backstabbing, rabid 
opportunism, shifting political positions before and after the elections and 
before and after entering coalitions. 

Electoral campaigns have turned into carnivals and parliament into a circus; 
spectacle, showmanship and hogging the camera are unchecked by any moral 
constraints; indeed, it seems now virtually imperative to have one's moral 
backbone extracted before entering the world of politics, a world divorced from 
morals and ethics and a world in which private morals are divorced from public 
morals. 

Such are the blights that plague any parliamentarian who has retained a modicum 
of sensitivity, and they are more than apparent to any objective observer of 
the pornographic collusion between the commercial media and politics. 

These are the manifestations of a modern democracy that can perpetuate itself 
without democrats because it has established traditions and institutions 
capable of embracing the pettiest political panderers and posers, capable of 
accommodating pragmatism and opportunism beneath the euphemism of 
utilitarianism, and capable of enduring the politics of expedience, which is to 
say the willingness to tread on corpses (both material and spiritual) without 
batting an eyelid in the pursuit of one's ends and the mindset that considers 
all this a virtue.

The foregoing were not the moral outlook nor even a passing phase of 
democracy's founding fathers of the likes of Thomas Jefferson, Georges Jacques 
Danton, Giuseppe Mazzini, Louis Auguste Blanqui, Karl Marx, the leaders of the 
Chartist movement and other radical democrats who forged the path for modern 
democracy as a mode of government based on majority rule. Nor were they the 
morals of the first liberals who were less concerned with the principle of 
majority rule than they were with the values of liberty and private property, 
even if these had to be safeguarded through a restricted franchise. 

This is not to deny that these were human beings prone to err, that many of the 
values to which they subscribed appear to us today conservative if not 
downright reactionary, and that, as many studies have shone, many aspects of 
their personal lives were at odds with the principles they preached. 

However, they were all proponents of new and radical idealisms whose 
constituent values were not derived from local or global balances of powers and 
whose appeal for democracy was not a banner to be waved when it suited the 
demands of national interest. These were people for whom political reform was 
an essential component of their zeal for a just and fair society. In effect, 
they were revolutionary visionaries and as remote as can be in moral 
temperament from politicians who cynically spout democratic platitudes without 
for a moment believing in equality and the quest for a more just and rational 
society. 

Whether at a later stage in their evolution democracies settle into solidly 
established self-reproducing institutions with a truly democratic elite that 
safeguards them from the deluge of anti-democratic mass culture, or whether 
they open themselves to self-serving cynics who thrive in a media jungle that 
has nothing whatsoever to do with democratic values, I do not believe that we 
can begin to build a democracy with that mentality that prevails in latter-day 
democracies. It is impossible to imagine the opportunists in the West, from 
Bush down to the to most insinificant campaign secretary or speechwriter, as 
capable of founding a democracy. 

In Brazil's Hugo Chavez we find someone who is much closer in his moral makeup 
to the revolutionary spirit of democracy's founding fathers than all those Arab 
politicians whom the US wants to commission, or who are vying to be 
commissioned, with the task of building democracy in the "Greater Middle East" 
put together. There is a paucity of reform-minded democrats in the current 
scramble to respond to American pressures while keeping the same elites in 
power. 

This is not a question of charisma. That too is lacking, but this is not the 
problem. The Arab world, like other parts of the Third World, has produced more 
than its share of colourful and eccentric leaders who have had journalists 
flocking to interview them, even though they have left nothing standing in 
their societies, not even the stones laid by the urban developers under 
colonialist rule. 

No, we have little need for charismatic leaders of that calibre. But, what is 
existentially disturbing is the gaping vacuum in the realm of vision, the 
absence of the aspiration to a more just society, the lack of ideological 
passion that characterised the first proponents of democracy where none 
existed. In the "Greater Middle East" democracy to some means skipping the 
formative phase and jumping straight to the backroom deals of coalition 
politics that characterise postmodern democracies. 

It is unacceptable as we lay the foundations for our own democracies simply to 
reach out and grab the predigested jargon of George Bush and his fundamentalist 
speechwriters. Democracy is not something you can pick up at a drive-by window 
like a coke or a hamburger, or even some ready-made item that requires the 
strain of comparison shopping in order to get the best deal. 

What kind of democrat would advise the Palestinians to relinquish their rights? 
Certainly, not the kind capable of founding a democracy, because that is the 
kind that defends people's rights to his eyeteeth, the kind that is incensed by 
injustice, that rejects might as a substitute for rights and, indeed, sees a 
moral antithesis between right and might, as was the case with Hannah Arendt in 
her thesis on violence. 

The democrat is not the manipulator who works the balance of power in a 
democratic government towards his personal advancement or the advancement of 
his party. Nor is he or she the one who, for example, supports the decisions 
approved by the Israeli democratic majority regarding the future of the 
Palestinians or the equal right of women to pilot planes that bomb Palestinian 
homes. That is democracy in form, but one that, in this case, sanctions the 
repression and occupation of another people and militaristic values that 
inherently entrench the inferiority of women. 

The democrat is not the person who regards Sharon's refusal to withdraw from 
the occupied territories in accordance with UN resolutions a stand for 
democracy and his unilateral disengagement plan from Gaza a step forward when 
he has nothing positive to say about the prospect of the emergence of a 
sovereign state. The democrat in the formative phase is the person who 
subscribes to democratic values out of principle and not as a bargaining chip 
in dealings with the powers that be in today's world.

In his speech to the National Defense University at Fort Lesley McNair on 8 
March, the American cowpoke turned champion of democracy hailed the municipal 
elections in Saudi Arabia as a step forward towards broader democratic 
participation (applause!) and the recent Palestinian elections as a step 
towards liberation from "the legacy of (Palestinian obviously) corruption and 
violence" rather than from the vice of the Israeli occupation (more applause!). 
He described the demonstrations by the Lebanese opposition against the Syrian 
presence in Lebanon as an uprising for democratic reforms and another sign of 
the successes of America's war against terrorism, which were perhaps too many 
to enumerate in his speech. 

But did you notice, too, that in that same speech he referred to the attack 
against the marine bases in Beirut in 1983, mentioning it in the same breath as 
the attack of 11 September 17 years later and the bombings of the American 
embassies in Africa and the USS Cole? Now there's something to give you pause 
for thought. 

For years we have been trying to call his attention to Lebanon, which he had 
never mentioned in any of his speeches, not even as an example of the 
possibilities of how democracy might blossom in the Arab world. Yet suddenly 
Bush gets it in his mind to pack in two references to Lebanon, one of which he 
squeezed into his list of Al-Qaeda-like operations and the other of which he 
depicted as a velvet revolution that we are to assume had taken its cue from 
America's trailblazing crusade for democracy. How deftly he took that dense 
intricate fabric of Lebanon with all its contradictions and contrasts and cut 
and trimmed it to suit the American image of the contest between good and evil. 

Are there no Arab democrats out there to remind him that, on the same day he 
stood before that military academy in Texas, a huge mass rally to counter the 
one he referred to in his speech took place in nearly the same vicinity in 
Beirut? It seems important to note that the fact that these demonstrators had 
assembled and disbanded just as peacefully as their predecessors, with no need 
for police intervention, indicates that a democratic culture had taken root in 
Lebanon long before Bush decided to mention that country in his speech, and in 
a manner so insidiously calculated to wreak dissension. I doubt very much that 
two opposing demonstrations of that scale would have passed without clashes, 
the firing of teargas canisters and a number of dead and wounded even in 
democratic Israel.

Democratic culture in Lebanon did not sprout from the American intervention in 
Iraq or from Bush's speech or from Resolution 1559. It had existed long before 
that, albeit with its flaws of denominational quotas, pseudo-dynastic 
influences, a relatively frail principle of citizenship in concept and 
practice, and a host of foreign intelligence agencies that found easy pickings 
in Lebanon's denominational and kinship patchwork and its not very democratic 
system for plurality in government. 

The Lebanese opposition, therefore, benefited from existing democratic 
traditions; it did not establish these traditions as the opposition movements 
had in Prague, Georgia, Ukraine and elsewhere. The same applies to the 
supporters of the resistance and alliance with Syria. 

Naturally, Bush did not mention all of this for the simple reason that he is 
not a democrat, even if he has read Natan (Anatoly) Sharansky, one of the 
sources from which he is cribbing lessons on democracy. 

But, one would think it the duty of Arab democrats to draw Bush's attention to 
a few hard facts about Lebanon and the Lebanese democratic culture. One would 
also think that they would sense it their duty, if indeed, they are sincere in 
their desire for popular legitimacy and in their desire to help democratise the 
popular political culture. Unfortunately, the prevalent mindset of purported 
democrats has tuned itself in to Washington and its agenda for the region, 
without having any democratic agenda of their own, in the sense of a vision for 
attaining equality and justice.

Tehran can shout until it's blue in the face that it does not possess nuclear 
weapons and has no intention to, but the world will echo America's claims to 
the contrary. Korea's mad butcher Kim Jong Il can swear by all that is holy to 
him that he possesses nuclear weapons, but Australia on behalf of the US will 
swear that he is lying. Syria can protest as much as it likes that Resolution 
1559 violates the UN Charter because it was not issued on the basis of a threat 
to world peace and security and none of the parties concerned had appealed to 
the Security Council to begin with, but no one wants to waste time discussing 
the matter. After all, life is unfair and international law is a farce in 
today's world, and, in all events, only the portion of the resolution that 
pertains to Syria will be applied. 

Not that the US is about to commend all that pragmatism or realism or whatever 
you might call it. Nor is it about to give Syria a pat on the back for having 
taken "positive steps forward". Rather, Bush proclaims that he will not abide 
by Syria's partial solutions and manoeuvres and other such belligerent talk, 
for the simple reason that Israel has Syria in its crosshairs so Washington 
does too. 

Meanwhile, Sharon, a renowned war criminal, can declare with impunity that he 
will never ever implement the UN resolutions pertaining to the Israeli 
occupation of Syrian territory and Washington will back him up in word and 
deed. Such is the dark side of the world of Martha Stuart who is all the craze 
in the US; the world of conspicuous media consumption, of George Bush, 
Rumsfeld, Condi and the rest of the thugs. 

But should not nascent Arab democracy make itself heard in the midst of this 
wilderness as the voice of justice, as a voice that rejects the logic behind 
Resolution 1559? Instead, we get an Arab minister demanding that Syria should 
implement Resolution 1559 immediately and without delay, which is more than 
Kofi Annan has asked from Syria, because that is not what the resolution 
stipulates. The minister in question issued this demand from Tel Aviv, no less, 
which has yet to implement any of the resolutions pertaining to it and which 
immediately and without delay is annexing occupied territories, building a 
separating wall in violation of the ruling of the International Court of 
Justice, and tearing apart a land and its people, rather than unifying and 
safeguarding it, as Syria has done in Lebanon. 

Where is the voice of Arab democracy that should be protesting these 
injustices? Or do Arab democrats intend to leave the opposition to sycophancy 
to Sharon's Israel and to the selective application of even the feeblest 
Security Council resolution? One would presume not, just as one would presume 
that a true democrat would treat other national causes and principles as more 
than banners to wave in front of the cameras, if he is sincere in building a 
truly democratic society from the grassroots up. 

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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