World Movement for Democracy Made in the USA
by Tom Barry
by Tom Barry
The
"world's democratic movement" is not another one of the transnational
citizens' movements, like the anti-globalization or anti-war movements,
that prides itself on having no central structure, no dogma, or
even an office.
This movement
is highly organized, better funded, and even has its own "secretariat."
Unlike other leaderless but world-shaking transnational citizens'
networks that emerged after the end of the Cold War, the "world's
democratic movement" is not a product of global civil society but
a quasi-governmental initiative based in Washington, DC.
Carl
Gershman, the longtime president of the National
Endowment for Democracy (NED) where the movement is headquartered,
says that the U.S.-government-backed World Movement for Democracy
is "an imaginative new mechanism that can facilitate networking,
sharing, and solidarity among democrats around the world."
The leading
voice of this "movement" is President George W. Bush. Celebrating
the 20 th anniversary of the neoconservative-led National Endowment
for Democracy on November 6, 2003, President Bush said, "We've
reached another great turning point [in history], and the resolve
we will show will shape the next stage of the world democratic movement."
Whereas the
democratization strategy that President Ronald Reagan launched in
198283 targeted the Soviet Union and its "evil empire,"
Bush has said that his administration's democratization initiative
would focus first on the Middle East, and that the "establishment
of a free Iraq will be a watershed event in the global democratic
revolution."
In the first
State of the Union address of his second term, Bush took America's
self-imposed mission to spread democracy and freedom to new heights
of idealism, committing the United States to the tasks of spreading
democracy around the globe and "ending tyranny in our world."
In keeping
with the radical thrust of Bush's foreign policy, the president
often refers to this movement in military terms "forward
strategy of freedom" and "global democratic revolution." Calling
for a doubling of NED's budget for its democratization work in the
Middle East, the president declared, "The advance of freedom
is the calling of our time. It is the calling of our country."
NED and
USAID Provide Political Aid
Together with
the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the National
Endowment for Democracy has functioned as an instrument of the U.S.
government's democratization strategy over the past two decades.
Whereas USAID is an agency of the State Department, quasi-governmental
NED is organized as a nonprofit but funded almost entirely by the
U.S. government.
Since 1982,
when President Reagan launched what he called a "crusade" to
foster "free market democracies" and spread the a neoliberal
version of the "magic of the marketplace," both USAID and NED
have channeled U.S. government development and public diplomacy
funding into the democratization programs of the international institutes
of the Republican and Democratic Parties, the AFL-CIO, and the U.S.
Chamber of Commerce, as well as a wide range of institutes, political
parties, and nongovernmental organizations abroad.
As part of
the Cold War, the U.S. government in 1947 began channeling political
aid through the CIA to political parties, publications, policy institutes,
academic institutions, and other nongovernmental actors. After Congress
prohibited such covert funding in the 1970s, a U.S. government-funded
task force called the Democracy Program, which was directed largely
by neoconservatives, proposed a new political aid program that would
overtly support the type of nongovernmental entities that previously
received CIA funding.1
Soon after
Ronald Reagan took office, the new administration put this proposal
into action, assigning the U.S. Information Agency (USIA) and USAID
as the chief sources of political funding. But rather than channeling
the aid directly to foreign actors, the Reagan administration decided,
in line with the Democracy Program proposal, that the "democracy-building"
aid would flow through U.S. private organizations, mainly the newly
created National Endowment for Democracy and its affiliates in the
two political parties, labor, and business.
NED and other
components of the Reagan administration's democratization strategy
were an attempt to revive the post-WWII international networks of
congresses, publications, and intellectuals funded by the CIA, such
as the Congress on Cultural Freedom, in which many neoconservative
forerunners like Irving
Kristol and Melvin Lasky were leading figures.
Since its first
years NED's "democracy-building" initiatives have had two main
thrusts one to promote U.S.-allied political actors against
political parties and governments not closely aligned with the United
States (such as Nicaragua, Haiti, Cuba, and Venezuela), and another
to promote "free market democracy" in countries regarded as
having an overly large government presence in the economy, notably
in the "transitional" states of the former Soviet Union. As
in the 1980s, when the U.S. government deployed NED to support surrogate
"freedom fighters" in Asia, Africa, and Latin America, NED
today is a central player in the new U.S.-led "global democratic
revolution."
The U.S. government's
funding for "democracy building" is closely tied to U.S. foreign
policy priorities and generally goes to groups who fall in line
with or at least do not oppose U.S. economic, diplomatic, and military
initiatives.
"Network
of Networks"
In the mid-1990s,
the U.S. government and NED concluded that the democracy-building
strategy needed an overhaul. Taking its cue from the anti-globalization
and other transborder citizens' movements, NED began to establish
networks of center-right foundations, research institutes, youth
groups, parliamentarians, and nongovernmental organizations. In
1999 NED, with U.S. government and U.S. foundation support, organized
the founding assembly of the World Movement for Democracy in New
Delhi.
In the age
of globalized communication and transnational cyber-networking,
as exemplified by the anti-free trade movement, NED decided to start
its own global citizens' movement. Rather than just channeling U.S.-government
funds to disparate groups, NED's president Carl Gershman in 1999
established his office as the "secretariat" for a World Movement
for Democracy.2
The movement's
objective is to "offer new ways to give practical help to democrats
who are struggling to liberalize authoritarian systems and to consolidate
emerging democracies."3
According to
NED, "The World Movement helps to fulfill one of the objectives
of NED's most recent strategic plan, namely 'to create a community
of democrats, drawn from the most developed democracies and the
most repressive autocracies as well as everything in between, and
united by the belief that the common interest is served by the gradual
expansion of systems based on freedom, self-government, and the
rule of law'."
Just as the
citizens' global anti-globalization movement often described itself
as a "movement of movements," NED describes the World Movement
for Democracy as a "network of networks," that functions as
an umbrella organization for an array of affiliated international
networks of citizens' groups, parliamentarians, research institutions,
business groups, and foundations. What distinguishes this movement
from citizens' networks is that it was created as a U.S. government-supported
initiative.
U.S. taxpayer
revenues cover the cost of having NED function as the logistical
and infrastructural secretariat for this multifaceted democracy
movement. Annual State Department allocations cover the four NED
staff members who oversee the network from their positions in the
office of NED's president. Most of the project funding for NED's
WMD, however, comes from right-wing foundations in the United States,
led by the Bradley
Foundation, which has provided the start-up and general support
funding for an array of other neoconservative foreign policy projects,
including the Project
for the New American Century.
Although the
World Movement for Democracy states that it "does not advocate
positions on particular political issues," the network's website
and publications, such as its ezine DemocracyNews, largely
reflect the U.S. government's foreign policy positions with respect
to countries such as Venezuela and Cuba.
NED has created
regional portals for participants in the network. For example, for
Latin America and the Caribbean there is the "Portal de la
democracia de las Américas," which opens to the webpage of
the Red Ciudadana por la Democracia en las Américas (Citizens'
Network for Democracy in the Americas).4
In addition
to its regional portals to "citizens' networks," NED through
the World Movement for Democracy has established regional forums
with more restricted participation, such as the Democracy Forum
in East Asia and the Africa Democracy Forum.
Also under
the umbrella of the World Movement for Democracy are several other
global "pro-democracy" networks that NED has been developing
over the past decade, including International Movement of Parliamentarians
for Democracy, Network of Young Democracy Activists, Democracy Information
and Communications Technology Group, and the Network of Democracy
Research Institutes. The latter, which includes as members think
tanks and policy institutes throughout the world, receives research
and technical assistance from NED's Democracy Resource Center.
As part of
its effort to function as a nexus for a "network of networks,"
NED in 1995 convened a meeting in Taipei, Taiwan in conjunction
with Taiwan's Institute for National Policy Research that aimed
to spark the creation of "democracy foundations" around the
world. In 2003, Taiwan, "following a period of consultation
with NED," created the Taiwan Democracy Foundation.5
The Institute
for National Policy Research is a think tank that is closely associated
not only with NED but with the American
Enterprise Institute, the premier neoconservative think tank.
Today, there are three dozen foundations that participate in the
NED-initiated World Conference of Democracy-Support Foundations.
One of the
most recent movement-building exercises of NED is the Movement of
Parliamentarians for Democracy, founded in Washington in February
2003. Among the main congressional supporters of this NED networking
were Christopher
Cox (R-CA) and Eliot Engel (D-NY), both closely associated with
numerous neoconservative organizations.
A Neocon
Product
Neoconservatives
inside and outside the Bush administration have been central players
in an array of government-backed initiatives such as the World Movement
for Democracy and the Community of Democracies, as well as in such
strictly private democratization programs as that of the neocon
American Enterprise Institute.
In early 2005
President Bush tapped neoconservative ideologue Elliott
Abrams infamous for his key role during the Reagan administration
in the NED-funded efforts to support the Nicaraguan Contras
to direct his Global Democracy Initiative.
Penn
Kemble, a longtime associate of Carl Gershman and Elliott Abrams
and who, like Gershman, has his political roots in the Trotskyist
Social
Democrats/USA, served as deputy director of the now-defunct
U.S. Information Agency, a stronghold of neoconservatives since
the early 1980s. In 1999 President Clinton named Kemble the State
Department's special representative for the U.S.-led Community of
Democracies Initiative, which established the Community of Democracies
at a June 2000 meeting in Warsaw.
NED and the
World Movement for Democracy are also promoters of the Community
of Democracies which has been greeted with widespread skepticism
by many European nations who regard it as a U.S. strategy to skirt
UN authority. Addressing the meeting of the Community of Democracies
last April, Condoleezza
Rice said that this forum with its commitment to "principled
multilateralism" was creating a "balance of power that favors
freedom."
NED's new democracy
initiatives aim to foster a transnational citizens' network funded
and guided by the U.S. government and right-wing foundations that
will counter the anti-free trade and anti-imperialist citizens'
networks that have emerged in this age of globalized communications.
The close identification
of the U.S.-sponsored democracy movement with U.S. foreign and military
policy has made great strides forward in incorporating hundreds
of citizens' groups around the world.
Already there
signs that the movement may prove counterproductive in the region
that is the main target of NED's democratization agenda. Throughout
the Middle East, as in Cuba and Venezuela, democracy-building is
getting a bad name since it is so closely associated with U.S. "regime-change"
efforts by undemocratic means.
Notes
-
The Democracy Program, an extension of a USAID-funded organization
called the American Political Foundation included business and
USIA officials, but its key movers were the neoconservatives:
Eugenia Kemble (sister of Penn Kemble), George Weigel (later with
the Ethics and Public Policy Center and a signatory of the founding
statement of the Project for the New American Century), Raymond
Gastil of Freedom House, and Allen Weinstein (member of neocon-led
Coalition for Democratic Majority and later president of the NED-funded
Center for Democracy).
-
"Building
a Community of Democracies," NED.
-
World Movement for Democracy.
-
World
Movement for Democracy, Portal de la democracia en las Américas.
-
David Lowe, "Idea to Reality: NED at 20," NED, 2003. Lowe
is a NED vice president, specializing in government and external
relations.
August
4, 2005
Tom
Barry is policy director of the Interhemispheric
Resource Center (IRC).
Copyright
© 2005 International Relations
Center
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