Is Democracy on the March, or Revolution?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
Following
the attempted assassination of Israel's ambassador in London in
1982, Menachem Begin and Ariel Sharon invaded Lebanon to eradicate
the PLO nest of Yasser Arafat, then holed up in Beirut.
Mission
accomplished. The Israelis triumphed. Arafat and his PLO were expelled
to Tunis. But that was not the end of it. In occupied Lebanon, an
unanticipated Shia insurgency, Hezbollah, arose, bled the Israeli
army for years and eventually expelled it in 2000.
"We
let the Shia genie out of the bottle," said a rueful Yitzhak Rabin.
After
9-11, an impatient George Bush decided to solve his Iraq problem
by invading the country and ousting Saddam and the Baathists.
Mission accomplished in three weeks. Bush triumphed. But our invasion,
too, gave birth to an unanticipated insurgency that has now cost
us 12,000 U.S. dead and wounded, and $200 billion, with no end in
sight.
We,
too, let a genie out of the bottle. But, whether one opposed this
war or believed in it from the start, there is now no going back.
The Arab world of 300 million will be changed forever by the U.S.
invasion. We have unleashed forces that cannot be contained and
we cannot control.
Watching
brave Iraqis vote in defiance of terror threats, our hawks are claiming
vindication. See, we were right all along, they say. See, the Iraqis
want democracy and the insurgency consists only of bitter-enders.
Pointing
to the electoral victories of Hamid Karzai in Kabul, of moderate
Mahmoud Abbas in Palestine, of democrats in Georgia and Ukraine,
they echo the president: Freedom is on the march! Democracy is the
future.
But
when kings, autocrats or despots are deposed and the people rejoice,
it has not always meant democracy is assured. In modern history,
people's revolutions have produced tyrannies far more monstrous
than the ones they have pulled down.
The
American Revolution produced a constitutional republic in 1789.
Yet that same year a French Revolution hailed by Jefferson ended
in a reign of terror, Napoleon's dictatorship and decades of European
wars.
In
1917, progressives hailed the revolution in Russia that deposed
the czar, for it cleansed the Allied cause of the taint of despotism.
But that November, Bolsheviks swept Kerensky aside, seized power
and began a 70-year reign of terror. In 1918, the detested Kaiser
Wilhelm abdicated. The civilized world rejoiced. Fifteen years later,
Hitler took power.
Bush
and his acolytes believe that of greater relevance is what happened
more recently in Eastern Europe. When the Soviet Empire collapsed,
from the Baltic to the Mediterranean, from the Elbe to the Urals,
democracies arose to replace the crumbling dictatorships. This is
the vision they see materializing in the Middle East.
But
the comparison is invalid. The Stalinist regimes of Eastern Europe
were all imposed from above on Christian peoples who belonged to
the West and had been moving toward democracy. The communist nations
of Europe were kidnapped children who never forgot who they were
or where they came from.
In
the Arab Middle East, there is no memory of democracy. There is
an unbroken history of despotism and domination by Ottoman Turks,
then by Western imperial powers. To understand what kind of nations
liberated Middle East peoples will construct, consider the most
powerful currents running in the region.
With
the imminent inauguration of the first Shia-dominated Arab state
in a millennium in Baghdad, as a result of U.S.-sponsored elections,
Shias in Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Jordan and Lebanon have
seen a path to power suddenly open up. Every throne, every palace
in the Middle East is today less secure.
What
other forces has our invasion unleashed? One surely is the popular
desire for freedom and democracy. But darker forces also roil the
region. One is a virulent hatred of Israel and its American patron.
From Morocco to Pakistan, Osama is as admired as Bush is hated.
Fundamentalism
is on the rise, even in Iraq. There is a deep sense that only by
a return to the Islamic roots that once made their civilization
the greatest on earth can the greatness of Arab peoples be restored.
And there is both a revulsion in this region against what is perceived
as a decadent and toxic American culture and a will to be rid of
U.S. political and military domination.
In
the recent past, the dethroning of pro-Western monarchs has produced
despots such as Nasser, Khadafi, Saddam and the Ayatollah Khomeini.
Whence comes, then, the hopeful expectation of what will follow
the fall of friendly Arab autocracies?
In
1917, Wilson and Lenin both looked forward to the coming end of
monarchy in Europe. Wilson thought democracy would rise from the
ruins of the royal houses. Lenin believed it would be communism.
Today,
both Bush and bin Laden believe in revolutionary change in the Islamic
world. Bush believes democracy will arise as the despots depart.
Bin Laden believes Islamism inherits the estate.
Both
cannot be right.
February
7, 2005
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail], former presidential candidate and White House aide,
is editor of The American
Conservative and the author of eight books, including A
Republic Not An Empire and the upcoming Where
the Right Went Wrong.
Copyright
© 2005 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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