The Abuse of 'Democracy'
by
Lawrence S. Wittner
by Lawrence S. Wittner
George
W. Bushs recent claim that the U.S. war in Iraq is part of
an attempt to spread democracy to the Middle East should
not surprise anyone familiar with the use of that word to camouflage
sordid realities.
When, in the
aftermath of World War II, Stalin had the Soviet Union gobble up
the nations of Eastern Europe, he christened them Peoples
Democracies although they were neither democratic nor meant
to be. This debasement of democracy and other noble
terms such as freedom and peace to crude
propaganda was undoubtedly what George Orwell had in mind when he
wrote his powerful novel, 1984, which portrayed a nightmarish society
in which words were turned inside out to justify the policies of
cynical and unscrupulous rulers.
Unfortunately,
however, democracy has also been abused throughout American
history. In the nineteenth century, land-hungry politicians, slaveholders,
and businessmen defended the U.S. conquest of new territory by claiming
that it would extend the area of democracy and freedom. In the twentieth
century, President Woodrow Wilson grandly proclaimed that U.S. participation
in World War I would make the world safe for democracy.
A few decades later, Washington officials again sanctified U.S.
policy by invoking democracy, for they declared repeatedly that
the U.S. role in the Cold War was designed to defend the Free
World. Indeed, it would be hard to find a U.S. war or expansionist
enterprise that was not accompanied by enthusiastic rhetoric about
supporting democracy.
In fairness,
it should be noted that the U.S. government has economically and
militarily supported many democratic nations. After World War II,
it forged alliances with a good number of them.
But it has
also provided military and economic assistance to numerous nations
ruled by bloody dictatorships, including Francos Spain, Chiang
Kai-Sheks China, the Shahs Iran, Somozas Nicaragua,
Batistas Cuba, Sukarnos Indonesia, the Saud familys
Saudi Arabia, Diems South Vietnam, Duvaliers Haiti,
Marcoss Philippines, the Colonels Greece, and many other
tyrannies. Indeed, the term Free World originally included
Stalins Russia. And, not so long ago, the U.S. government
had no scruples about providing military assistance to Saddam Husseins
Iraq. Furthermore, on occasion the U.S. government has sought to
overthrow democratic governments. Three of its success stories along
these lines occurred in Mossadeqs Iran, Arbenzs Guatemala,
and Allendes Chile, where democratic governments were succeeded
by vicious dictatorships. Based upon this record, observers might
well conclude that, for U.S. officials, the defense of democracy
has been less important as a motive than as a marketing device.
A good example
of democracy as a marketing device is its employment
in selling the U.S. program of military and economic aid to Greece
in 1947. This program had arisen out of the U.S. governments
fear that the Soviet Union, then at loggerheads with the United
States, stood on the verge of breaking through the Western defense
line to the oil-rich Middle East. To plan President Trumans
address to the nation on the new policy, Francis Russell, the director
of the State Departments Office of Public Affairs, met on
February 27 with the State-War-Navy Coordinating Committee. The
meeting records indicate that, when Russell asked if the speech
should emphasize the conflict with the Soviet Union, he was told
that it should avoid specifically mentioning Russia.
Then perhaps, said Russell, the administration should couch
it in terms of [a] new policy of this government to go to the assistance
of free governments everywhere. This proposal was greeted
enthusiastically, for it would be useful to relate military
aid to [the] principle of supporting democracy. Or, as one
participant put it, the only thing that can sell [the] public
would be to emphasize the threat to democracy. Ultimately, then,
the presidents March 12, 1947 address, which became known
as the Truman Doctrine, did not mention the conflict between two
rival nations, the United States and the Soviet Union, but instead
emphasized alternative ways of life, in which the United
States was defending the free one.
This approach
not only misrepresented the motives of U.S. government officials,
but the realities in the two nations targeted for the military and
economic aid. Joseph Jones, who drafted the presidents address,
recalled: That the Greek government was corrupt, reactionary,
inefficient, and indulged in extremist practices was well known
and incontestable; that Turkey . . . had not achieved full democratic
self-government was also patent. According to the minutes
of the State-War-Navy Coordinating Committee meeting, participants
agreed that the Greek government was a rotten one, though not
basically fascist.
Thus, President
Bushs recent contention that his war in Iraq is designed to
further the cause of democracy is not out of line with
the statements of past U.S. government officials, who have not been
very scrupulous about how they have packaged their policies. Nor
is it out of line with the behavior of other governments, always
eager to put the most attractive face on their ventures.
Even
so, given the long-term abuse of the word democracy
as a public relations device as well as the collapse of the
presidents earlier justifications for the Iraq War
we might be pardoned for viewing his sudden enthusiasm for democracy
with a good deal of skepticism.
November
29, 2005
Lawrence
S. Wittner [send him mail]
is Professor of History at the State University of New York/Albany.
His latest book is Toward
Nuclear Abolition: A History of the World Nuclear Disarmament Movement,
1971 to the Present (Stanford University Press).
This
article originally appeared on the History
News Network.
Copyright
© 2005 History News Network. Reprinted
with author's permission.
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S. Wittner Archives
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