America’s Misguided Wilsonianism. By Josh Kiernan.
The “war on terrorism” and the Cold War. By Josh Kiernan. Jerusalem Post, August 3, 2013.
Kiernan:
Perhaps the lesson from the Cold War is
that building democracies requires patience, moral compromises and, at times,
putting national interests above lofty Wilsonian ideals.
There
are parallels between the current “war on terrorism” and the Cold War. By
learning from the West’s experiences during the Cold War, we can apply the
lessons to the current conflict, particularly in the context of the Arab
Spring.
During
the Cold War, the US faced the dilemma of supporting anti-communist dictators
and undermining democratic values on the basis that the alternative, supporting
local populist movements, would result in the emergence of Soviet-sponsored
communist regimes that themselves would repress any democratic movements.
In the
end the US “won” the Cold War and in places like Latin America democracy
ultimately emerged triumphant, although the US paid a moral price for its often
ambiguous and sometimes hypocritical policy. One might thus conclude that US
policy during the Cold War in supporting anticommunist regimes was a necessary
evil.
In the
war on Islamic extremism, the US faces a similar dilemma. Should it support
democratic movements seeking to overthrow secular autocratic or dictatorial
regimes when there is a significant risk that assisting in the overthrow of
such regimes will simply give way to the emergence of hard-line anti-democratic
Islamic regimes? The US is often blamed for creating the conditions that give
rise to Islamic extremism through its support of dictatorial regimes in the
Middle East, its support for Israel and its perceived failure to promote
democratic values. However, the sources of Islamic extremism are far more
complex and actually have less to do with US policy and more to do with local
and regional factors. And there is no doubt that Islamic extremism is the
greatest threat facing the West since the Cold War.
The
problem the US faces in supporting democratic movements in the Arab world is
similar to that faced during the Cold War since such support carries with it a
high degree of risk that it will ultimately backfire. As has occurred in Egypt
and elsewhere, democratic movements have been hijacked by Islamist forces who
ultimately use the tools of democracy to destroy it.
Islamists
do not believe in democracy. To them, democracy is an anti-Islamic Western
creation that undermines their ultimate goal of creating an Islamic Caliphate
guided by Sharia law. Sharia is their model constitution. When the Islamists
come to power they gradually restrict civil liberties, demonize and persecute
religious minorities and eventually do away with Western-style concepts of democracy.
This is
what was happening in Morsi’s Egypt, this is the same struggle that is taking
place in countries like Libya and Tunisia. We have even seen how Islamist
tendencies are starting to erode Turkey’s democratic values.
Far
worse consequences are likely to unfold in Syria if the Assad regime falls.
This despite the fact that this regime is dictatorship at its worst, its forces
responsible for unspeakable atrocities and its allies Hezbollah and Iran, like
itself, sworn enemies of the US and its allies Israel, Saudi Arabia and others.
Even in Israel they speak of the “devil you know” and many policy makers would
prefer to see Assad stay in power considering the likely alternative of a
failed state increasingly taken over by al-Qaida-affiliated forces with no red
lines, no limits.
Radical
Sunni Islam is an extreme machine of murder and violence. It preaches piety but
engages in barbaric acts of violence, murder, rape and ethnic cleansing, openly
promotes genocide and proudly displays its handiwork on YouTube; to it, these
are badges of honor.
If
these groups obtain nuclear or chemical weapons, they will have little to no
hesitation in using them. As non-state actors, the “MAD” paradigm, Mutually
Assured Destruction, does not apply. If the Assad regime falls, the al-Qaida
affiliated groups will likely get their hands on some of Assad’s massive
arsenal of chemical weapons unless the US and/or its allies undertake a
complicated military operation requiring boots on the ground, since an air
attack would create an unacceptably high risk of dispersal.
So, in
determining whether to undermine autocratic or dictatorial regimes with the
idealistic goal of promoting democracy in the Middle East, the US needs to ask
the difficult question: are Middle Eastern societies really ready for
democracy? At the end of the day, one has to make a judgment call as to the
likelihood of democracy emerging in a given country before rushing to support
the overthrow of the likes of Mubarak, Gaddafi and Assad.
While
this requires a country-by-country analysis, there does appear to be a
significant risk that in many of these countries, an idealistic policy of
undermining the “old” regimes in an effort to promote democracy will backfire
and the US will inadvertently end up facilitating the emergence of much more
hostile Islamist theocratic and antidemocratic regimes. Perhaps the lesson from
the Cold War is that building democracies requires patience, moral compromises
and, at times, putting national interests above lofty Wilsonian ideals.