-
- The Fantasy
Of Democracy
In An Arab State
Arab states are
largely squalid, corrupt, brutal dictatorships.
No surprise there. We created most of these
dictators.
By Robert Fisk
The Independent - UK
2-14-4

- For democracy, read fantasy. Iraq
is getting so nasty for our great leaders these
days that anything - and anyone - is going to be
thrown to the dogs to save them. The BBC, the
CIA, British intelligence - any journalist that
dares to point out the lies that led us to war -
get pelted with more lies. The moment we suggest
that Iraq never was fertile soil for Western
democracy, we get accused of being racists. Do we
think the Arabs are incapable of producing
democracy, we are asked? Do we think they are
subhuman?
-
- This kind of tosh comes from the
same family of abuse as that which labels all and
every criticism of Israel anti-Semitic. If we
even remind the world that the cabal of
neo-conservative, pro-Israeli proselytisers -
Messers Perle, Wolfowitz, Feith, Kristol, et al -
helped to propel President Bush and US Defence
Secretary Donald Rumsfeld into this war with
grotesquely inaccurate prophecies of a new Middle
East of democratic, pro-Israeli Arab states, we
are told that we are racist even to mention their
names. So let's just remember what the neo-cons
were advocating back in the golden autumn of 2002
when Tony was squaring up with George to destroy
the Hitler of Baghdad.
-
- They were going to re-shape the
map of the Middle East and bring democracy to the
region. The dictators would fall or come onside -
thus the importance of persuading the world now
that the preposterous Gaddafi is a
"statesman" (thank you, Jack Straw) for
giving up his own infantile nuclear ambitions -
and democracy would blossom from the Nile to the
Euphrates. The Arabs wanted democracy. They would
seize it. We would be loved, welcomed, praised,
embraced for bringing this much sought-after
commodity to the region. Of course, the neo-cons
got it wrong.
-
- The latest contribution to the
defence of these men came from David Brooks in
The New York Times. "In truth," he
writes, "the people labelled 'neo-cons'...
don't actually have much contact with one
another... There have been hundreds of
references, for example, to Richard Perle's
insidious power over administration policy, but
I've been told by senior administration officials
that he has had no significant meetings with Bush
or Cheney since they assumed office... All
evidence suggests that Bush formed his
conclusions independently."
-
- It's good of the
"senior" officials to let us know this
- let alone the unconsciously hilarious aside
that Mr Bush reaches conclusions on his own.
Brooks even tries to erase the word
"neo-conservative" from the narrative
of the Iraq war with the absurd line that
"con is short for 'conservative' and neo is
short for 'Jewish'". For now, the mere use
of the phrase "neo-conservative" can be
anti-Semitic: Brooks actually ends his article by
announcing that "anti-Semitism is
resurgent".

-
- If that's the best critics can be
threatened with, then Messers Wolfowitz, Perle
and the rest are on the run. They didn't say
democracy would work. They didn't influence
President Bush. They didn't have the power. They
hardly talked to him. Neo-conservatives? Who? But
it was the neo-cons who were - along with Israel
itself - among the most fervent advocates of an
Iraqi invasion.
-
- They had seized upon a devastating
and all-too-true fact of life in most of the
Middle East: that Arab states are largely
squalid, corrupt, brutal dictatorships. No
surprise there. We created most of these
dictators. We kicked off with kings and princes
and - if they didn't exercise sufficient control
over the masses - then we supported a wretched
bunch of generals and colonels, most of whom wore
a variety of British military uniforms with
eagles instead of crowns on their hat badges.
-
- Thus King Farouk was supplanted,
indirectly, by Colonel Nasser (and by General
Sadat and Air Force General Mubarak), King Idris
by Colonel Gaddafi - the Foreign Office loved the
young Gaddafi - and King Faisal's post-First
World War monarchy in Iraq was replaced,
eventually, by the Baath Party and Saddam
Hussein.
-
- So we never wanted the Arabs to
have democracy. When the Egyptians tried this in
the 1930s and looked like booting out Farouk, the
British clapped the opposition into prison. We
Westerners drew the borders of most of the Arab
nations, created their states and propped up
their obedient leaders - bombing them, of course,
if they nationalised the Suez Canal, helped the
IRA or invaded Kuwait. But the neo-cons and Mr
Bush - and then, inevitably, Mr Blair - wanted
them to have democracy.
-
- Now there are a lot of Arabs who
would like a bit of this precious substance
called democracy. Indeed, when they emigrate to
the West and settle down with US or British or
French or any other Western passport, they show
the same aptitude as ourselves for
"democracy". The Iraqis of Dearborn,
Michigan, are like any other Americans, and they
vote - largely Democrat - and play and work like
any other freedom-loving US citizens. So there's
nothing genetic about the Arab world's inability
to seize democracy.
-
- The problem is not the people. The
problem is the environment, the make-up of the
patriarchal society and - most important of all -
the artificial states which we created for them.
They do not and cannot produce democracy. The
dictators we paid and armed and stroked ruled by
torture and by tribe. Faced with nations which
they in many cases did not believe in, the Arab
peoples had confidence only in their tribes. The
kings were tribal - the Hashemites come from the
north-east of what we now call Saudi Arabia - and
the dictators were tribal. Saddam, as all the
world is told repeatedly, was a Tikriti. And
these ruthless men held power through a network
of tribal and sectarian alliances.
-
- When we bashed into their country,
of course, we told the Iraqis we were going to
give them democracy. They would have free
elections. I remember the first time I realised
how dishonest this promise was. It was when Paul
Bremer, America's failed proconsul in Iraq,
stopped talking about democracy and started
referring to "representative
government" - which is not the same thing at
all. That was when folk like Daniel Pipes, a
right-wing cousin of those neo-cons we can no
longer mention, started advocating not
"democracy" for Iraq but a
"democratically-minded autocrat".
-
- Bremer says there can be no
elections before the June "handover" of
"sovereignty" - in itself a lie because
the "handover" will give the mythical
"sovereignty" of Iraq to a group of
Iraqis chosen by the Americans and the British.
They will - prayers are now called for - later
hold the democratic elections we falsely promised
the Iraqi people and which the Iraqi Shias are
now vociferously demanding. And even if these
elections are ever held, most Iraqis will vote
according to tribe and religion. That is how
their political system has worked for almost a
hundred years and that is how the
American-selected "interim council"
works today.
-
- And so here we go again. No
weapons of mass destruction. No links between
Saddam and 11 September. No democracy. Blame the
press. Blame the BBC. Blame the spooks. But don't
blame Messers Bush and Blair. And don't blame the
American neo-conservatives who helped to push the
US into this disaster. They don't even exist. And
if you say they did, you know what you're going
to be called.
-
- © 2003 Independent Digital (UK)
Ltd
-

- http://news.independent.co.uk/world/fisk/story.jsp?story=490787
Rense.com
Shiite Leader Threatens Intifada Against U.S.
By Foreign News Services
Saturday 21 February 2004
Iraqi Shiite Leader
Seyyid Ali Al-Sistani yesterday warned that he would call
for an intifada (uprising) if American soldiers stayed in
Iraq after the handover of power on June 30, 2004. He
also insisted that there should be a significant role for
the Shiite in the future administration of the country,
as they make up the majority of the population.
Sistani spoke to the
German magazine Der Spiegel and said: "The U.S.
presence in Iraq should not be prolonged. The Iraqi
public knows how to act. If the U.S. presence is drawn
out longer than necessary, I will call for an
intifada." The necessary posters reportedly have
already been printed and are awaiting distribution to
every corner of the country.
- ©truthout 2004
Chutzpah, Thy Name
Is Perle
Chutzpaha Yiddish word that the
dictionary defines as "unmitigated effrontery or
impertinence, gall"is best illustrated by a
much-cited anecdote.
"Chutzpah is when a man kills his mother and his
father and then throws himself on the mercy of the court
on the grounds that he is an orphan."
In the last few days in Washington, however, prominent
neoconservatives, particularly arch-hawk Richard Perle,
are giving new meaning to the word.
Perle and his fellow neoconservatives are hailing
chief U.S. weapons-of-mass-destruction hunter, David Kay.
On resigning from his post last week, Kay charged that
the intelligence community, and particularly the CIA,
clearly exaggerated the size and scope of Saddam
Hussein's alleged WMD programs. "I don't think they
existed," he said, insisting that he himself, as
well as the intelligence community, "were almost all
wrong" about Iraq's alleged WMD stockpiles and
reconstitution of Iraq's nuclear-arms program.
"I have always thought our intelligence in the
Gulf has been woefully inadequate," Perle, former
chairman of the Pentagon's Defense Policy Board (DPB),
confided to The New York Times after Kay disclosed
his findings.
You would think from that remark that Perle had spent
the run-up to the Iraq invasion warning Congress and the
public that the intelligence community had hyped the WMD
threat posed by Saddam Hussein.
Perle and his close associatessuch as
Center for Security Policy president Frank Gaffney and
former CIA director James Woolseysaid quite the
opposite: their single-minded message, repeated endlessly
in op-ed columns, television interviews and Congressional
testimony, was that the intelligence community was
consistently underestimating the Iraqi threat in a
deliberate effort to undermine the drive to war.
Their campaign nowand there is an orchestrated
campaign underway, make no mistakeis to blame the
CIA for exaggerating the Iraqi threat, must rank right up
there with parenticidal orphans.
It was Gaffney, a long-time Perle protégè who worked
under him in Sen. "Scoop" Jackson's office and
later at the Pentagon during the Reagan administration,
for example, who was raising alarms over Hussein's
non-existent "atomic and perhaps even thermonuclear
weapons" even before 9/11.
- .Jim Lobe writes for
Inter Press Service, an international newswire,
and for Foreign Policy in Focus, a joint project of the
Washington-based Institute for Policy Studies and the New Mexico-based Interhemispheric Resource
Center.
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