George
Bush has decided that Iraq will be a democracy. Let’s skip right
over that oxymoron and discuss the prospects for democracy in
Iraq. According to the CIA and,
for all the money they spend, they should at least get this right here
is a breakdown of Iraq by ethnicity, religion and language:
|
Ethnic
groups:
|
Arab
75%-80%, Kurdish 15%-20%, Turkoman, Assyrian or other
5%
|
|
Religions:
|
Muslim
97% (Shi'a 60%-65%, Sunni 32%-37%), Christian or other
3%
|
|
Languages:
|
Arabic,
Kurdish (official in Kurdish regions), Assyrian, Armenian
|
Roughly
speaking, Iraq has three large separate groups, each located
in a discrete area. The Kurds are in the north, the Shiites
in the south, and the Sunnis in the middle. The Shiites appear
to be the most populous group. Let’s assume for the sake of
argument that there is no strong tradition of limited government
in Iraq. Thus, any democracy will be of the relatively unrestrained
variety. Whichever group is in charge will impose its will on
the others. The prospects for peace are dim.
This
goes against the prevailing wisdom which tells us that "democracy
promotes peace." So be it. The conventional wisdom is wrong.
Perhaps the leading cause of organized violence in today’s world,
aside from George Bush’s inferiority complex, is intrastate conflict
between and among ethnic and religious groups. Though many of
these conflicts have taken place under oppressive dictatorships,
a large number of them have occurred either entirely or partially
under democratic regimes as shown in the chart below.
|
Recent
Intrastate Conflicts
(source:
Federation of American Scientists)
|
| State |
Type
of Dispute |
Form
of Gov't. |
|
Afghanistan
|
Ethnic/religious
|
dictatorship
|
|
Algeria
|
Religious
|
mixed*
|
|
Angola
|
Ideological
|
mixed
|
|
Burma
|
Ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Burundi
|
Ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Colombia
|
Ideological
|
democracy
|
|
Congo
(Congo-Brazzaville)
|
Ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Congo
(Zaire)
|
Ethnic/ideological
|
mixed
|
|
Georgia
|
Ethnic
|
democracy
|
|
India
|
Ethnic/religious
|
democracy
|
|
India
|
Ideological
|
democracy
|
|
Indonesia
|
Religious
|
mixed
|
|
Indonesia
|
Ethnic/ideological
|
mixed
|
|
Indonesia
|
Ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Indonesia
|
Ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Mexico
|
Ethnic
|
democracy
|
|
Namibia
|
Ethnic
|
democracy
|
|
Nigeria
|
Ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Peru
|
Ideological
|
democracy
|
|
Philippines
|
Religious/ethnic
|
democracy
|
|
Russia
|
Ethnic/religious
|
democracy
|
|
Rwanda
|
Ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Sierra
Leone
|
Misc./ethnic
|
mixed
|
|
Solomon
Islands
|
Ethnic
|
constitutional
monarchy
|
|
Spain
|
Ethnic
|
democracy
|
|
Sri
Lanka
|
Ethnic/religious
|
mixed
|
|
Sudan
|
Ethnic/religious
|
mixed
|
|
Turkey
|
Ethnic
|
democracy
|
|
Yugoslavia
|
Ethnic/religious
|
mixed
|
*Changed
between democracy and dictatorship at various times.
Thus,
25 out of 29 recent intrastate conflicts were ethnic or religious
in nature. In 23 of the 25, the prevailing regime was democratic
throughout the dispute or at least at certain times during the
dispute. In certain cases, a democratic government was overthrown
because of the feeling of an ethnic or religious subgroup
that its interests were not being advanced by the democratic state.
The
empirical evidence indicates that democracy promotes ethnic and
religious conflict. An examination of the dynamics of the
democratic process explains why this is so. In democracies, people
tend to vote along ethnic/religious lines. (Since ethnicity and
religion are closely linked, they can be dealt with together.)
All experience confirms this. People of one ethnic group tend
to vote for candidates of the same ethnic group, or candidates
known to favor the interests of such group. For example, 93 percent
of Republicans are white according to the Gallup Poll; while 93
percent of blacks voted for Al Gore for President in 2000. That
being the case, it must be true that the candidates people vote
against are usually identified with other ethnic groups. Since
those voters opposed that candidate, it is reasonable to assume
that they harbor a certain amount of resentment against those
whose votes put that candidate into office. Voters may come to
view any increase in the population of other ethnic groups as
a threat to their well being, portending as it does the election
of officials they believe will harm their interests.
It
is no accident that people tend to vote along ethnic and religious
lines. It is inherent in the nature of democracy. Democracy
gives each person a virtually meaningless single vote. It allows
them to vote for one of the candidates on the ballot, none of
whom may represent the views and values of the voter. The average
voter in a lifetime is unlikely to decide an election with his
vote. The odds of casting the deciding vote in favor of a candidate
whose views precisely mirror your own are millions to one.
Since voters implicitly recognize the
virtual meaninglessness of their one vote, they have
little incentive to inform themselves in detail about candidates,
issues, and polices. It is much easier to vote for ethnic reasons.
The ethnic identity of candidates is usually clear. Further, it
takes little additional effort to ascertain which ethnic groups
a candidate serves. Thus, ethnic voting is a rational response
to the problem of rational ignorance about candidates and issues.
Ethnic identity provides valuable information at very low cost.
Given its efficiency, it always has been and likely always will
be a major factor in elections.
Even
if it is argued that people of similar ethnic and religious backgrounds
vote alike, not because of those backgrounds per se, but because
of their similar experiences, situations, values, and needs, we
reach the same conclusion. Since these factors themselves are
closely tied to ethnic and religious identity, the voting patterns
they produce will be closely tied to and, in practice, virtually
indistinguishable from, ethnicity and religion.
Thus,
democracy, inherently, contains the seeds of ethnic conflict.
History shows that, under certain circumstances, people who are
members of ethnic minorities prefer to fight wars of secession
to escape from the control of majority ethnic groups they believe
are hostile to their interests. Moreover, the ethnic conflict
created by democracy necessarily worsens over time. The
natural tendency of democratic government is to grow in size,
power and scope. By its nature, the state is the means by which
some people can impose the costs of achieving their goals onto
unwilling others. As Bastiat put it, "Government is the great
fiction, through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense
of everybody else." The desire to impose costs on others
is virtually limitless. Thus, governments tend to grow over time.
As government power increases, so does the threat perceived by
exploited ethnic minorities. At some point, ethnic minorities
will simply refuse to have their wealth confiscated and their
cultures destroyed by majority ethnic groups. They will fight.
The
solution to all this is obvious. The Kurds, Shiites, and Sunnis
should each form their own separate republics and allow people
in their domains the right to leave or stay and live in freedom.
(For you neoconservatives, freedom means doing what you will with
what you own. It has nothing to do with voting). If each of these
would-be republics paid me a one million dollar consulting fee
(Swiss Federal Bank, Account No. 983570957187) for this advice
and followed it, it would be an infinitesimal fraction of the
money and lives that will be wasted trying to force these disparate
groups to live together. Assalaamu Alaikum. Roughly translated
into English, this Arabic phrase means secession. Which
would, however, lead to just one more ethnic/religious conflict with
the Yankees. Since 1861, "secession" in American English
roughly translates into "United States preemptive strike
against."