http://www.gulfnews.com/opinion/columns/region/10076082.html

Published: 10/20/2006 12:00 AM (UAE)


Illustration by Nino Jose Heredia/Gulf News




Hard luck for Arab democrats

By Marwan Al Kabalan, Special to Gulf News
 
Last year, celebrating the second anniversary of the fall of Baghdad, US 
President George W. Bush promised a "wave" of democratic reform that would 
bring down "the last stronghold of world tyranny" - the Arab world. 

The toppling of Saddam Hussain's statue in Baghdad was ranked by Bush with the 
fall of the Berlin Wall "as one of the great moments in the history of 
liberty". 

The establishment of a free Iraq at the heart of the Middle East "will be a 
crushing defeat to the forces of tyranny and terror and a watershed event in 
the global democratic revolution", Bush told flag-waving troops in central 
Texas during the celebration.

Last September and in a speech before the 61st session of the UN General 
Assembly, Bush reiterated his commitment to the cause of freedom and democracy 
in the Arab world. But, the tone this time was different, the expectations were 
lower and his enthusiasm about democratic reform seemed, even for the casual 
observer of US policy, to have vanished.

In US political circles, as well as in the media, everybody seems now certain 
that the US has abandoned its commitment to democracy in the Middle East. 

The Los Angeles Times reported this week that former US secretary of state, 
James Baker, who also chair a bipartisan panel reassessing Iraq strategy for 
Bush, is going to propose in his report, due to be released after the US 
mid-term elections, that Washington drop the objective of democracy in Iraq and 
the greater Middle East in favour of "representative" governments. 

According to the paper, all current governments in the region will be 
considered "representative" as long as they maintain order and stability in 
their own countries.

The prevalent view today in Washington is that the president may have rocked 
the boat too much. Given the ill-fated venture in Iraq and the outcome of the 
Palestinian and the Egyptian elections, US officials believe the Arab world is 
not ready yet for democracy. 

A stable political culture must be built before free elections in Muslim 
countries are held. It is, hence, safer and wiser for the US to leave Arab 
governments heed the call for democracy at their own pace. 

Indeed, these same officials know very well that the Arab world has long moved 
"at its own pace" towards democracy. The result was almost no democracy at all. 
But, this might be exactly what the US seeks right now.

This new thinking in Washington caused panic among Arab democrats who have for 
long aspired for US help to promote democracy in the Arab world. One hundred 
and three Arab and Muslim intellectuals wrote a letter to Bush that was 
published in the Washington Post last week. 

The intellectuals expressed their concern about the shift in US policy 
regarding democracy promotion. "We know that some in the United States, worried 
by recent Islamist gains among voters in Palestine and Egypt, are having doubts 
about the wisdom of pushing for freedom and democracy in the Middle East. These 
worries are exploited by despots in the region to perpetuate the untenable 
status quo," the intellectuals argued.

Highly sensitive

Touching on a highly sensitive issue for most Americans - the September 11 
attacks - they then tried to influence US policy. 

"Democratic participation is the only way to combat extremism and pressure all 
groups, including Islamists, to moderate their stance in order to maximise 
their share of the vote. 

"The United States should continue to press for an end to repression by 
governing regimes of democratically minded liberal and Islamist groups and it 
should emphatically distance itself from such repression and condemn it in the 
strongest terms whenever and wherever it occurs. 

"We are confident that if Arab citizens are able to have their choice, they 
will choose democracy, freedom, peace and progress," the Arab intellectuals 
concluded.

Will the US administration listen to the voice of moderation in Arab world? The 
events of the past few months suggest that the US prefers to deal with 
dictators than politicians worried about re-election. The US had done this 
before and will continue to do it whenever its interests deem that necessary. 
Does this surprise anyone?

Dr Marwan Al Kabalan is a lecturer in media and international relations, 
Faculty of Political Science and Media, Damascus University, Syria

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