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The Arab Spring Becomes a Western Winter
by
Andrew P. Napolitano
Recently
by Andrew P. Napolitano: Governor
Romney Is Correct
Is the Arab
Middle East ready for democracy? We know how the past two American
presidents have answered this.
The revised
stated purpose behind President George W. Bush’s invasions of Afghanistan
and Iraq was to build a new world order by forcing democracy on
populations to whom it was truly alien. The original stated purpose
for invading Afghanistan was to destroy the folks who provided shelter
to the 9/11 attackers, and the original stated purpose for invading
Iraq was to rid it of a government that possessed and might use
weapons of mass destruction.
But when we
learned that the real support for the 9/11 attacks came from folks
protected by our so-called friends in Saudi Arabia, and when we
learned that the only weapons of mass destruction possessed by Iraq
were the ones the U.S. sold to Saddam Hussein in the mid-1980s,
which he no longer possessed, the Bush administration changed the
rhetoric but not the violence or its cost.
Since the termination
of those wars came about after the installation of puppet regimes
in both countries, and since those regimes now claim legitimacy
because they were elected by the people permitted to vote there,
we have been reminded that democracy is more than the result of
a majority vote. It is respect for the rule of law and recognition
of the inalienable rights of the individual. It is not torture,
extra-judicial killings, or government-sanctioned rape and legal
suppression of women and girls; it is not racial and religious and
ethnic hatred and persecution; and it is not the rule of mobs in
the streets.
When Egypt
was in turmoil a year ago, President Obama nudged Hosni Mubarak
from office. He was the longtime American puppet and Egyptian strongman
who called himself president but was never really elected. His downfall
was followed by a short-lived military dictatorship, and that was
followed by the popular election of Islamic radicals to the government.
They hate the West, the U.S. and Israel.
Is it any wonder
that our embassy in Cairo has been attacked and our folks who work
and live there are threatened every day? Should the president alone
be able to help depose a foreign leader without the consensus of
the American people or their elected representatives in Congress?
Did the president’s miscalculations take into account that it might
be better to leave in place the devil you know instead of inviting
the devil you don’t know to replace him? Did he consider that the
leader of Egypt is for the Egyptians – and not the American government
– to decide?
The case of
Libya is even worse. There, Obama unlawfully, deceptively and unconstitutionally
bombed Libya in an effort either to kill Col. Gadhafi, its former
strongman and American ally, or to weaken his defenses until he
surrendered. It was unlawful because he used the CIA to fight a
war. It was deceptive because he lied about no boots on the ground
("boots" referring to troops, rather than intelligence
agents with military hardware). It was unconstitutional because
under the Constitution, only Congress may declare war on another
country. This was an act of war on a legitimate government, one
that then-President George W. Bush and then-British Prime Minister
Tony Blair praised a few years earlier as a partner in the war against
terror, and one that posed no threat whatsoever to American freedom.
Now we know
that some of the very same people the U.S. fought – and supposedly
defeated in Afghanistan and Iraq – were part of the coalition of
violent militias that ousted Gadhafi with the help of American bombs.
And the government they wrought is too weak to protect our diplomats
and our real estate there from them. And so they attacked our unguarded
consulate in Benghazi and killed our ambassador, and so far they
have gotten away with it.
Does anyone
really believe the nonsense from the Obama administration that the
recent killings of Americans and others and the destruction in the
Arab world are about a 15-minute grade-C movie trailer with dubbed
voices and terrible acting and no plot or message? Or is the violence
about the opportunity of those Bush and Obama trusted to run new
governments to vent their hatred?
Is it not more
likely that when the West supported toppling Arab strongmen, the
rioters in the streets saw that as a signal to express hatred toward
the meddling West? Might Obama’s drones, which have fallen all over
the Middle East killing innocents in schools and hospitals, at weddings
and funerals, and demolishing mosques and homes, be coming back
to haunt him?
The Arab Spring
has become the Western Winter, brought about by two American presidents
who thought they could kill without moral justification or painful
consequence. We should come home from these barbaric places and
leave them alone. We should trade with them, since they want to
buy our iPads and washing machines and blue jeans, but let them
run their own governments.
Reprinted
with the author's permission.
September 27, 2012
Andrew P.
Napolitano [send
him mail], a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey,
is the senior judicial analyst at Fox News Channel. Judge Napolitano
has written six books on the U.S. Constitution. The most recent
is It
Is Dangerous To Be Right When the Government Is Wrong: The Case
for Personal Freedom. To find out more about Judge Napolitano
and to read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists,
visit creators.com.
Copyright
© 2012 Andrew P. Napolitano
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