Derailing democracy
BY Dilip Hiro
05/20/05 "Khaleej
Times" -- -- AN ELECTED Iraqi government is
about to take office in Baghdad — the first since the brief
democratic experiment that began with direct multiparty
parliamentary elections in 1953 and ended with the 1958
anti-royalist military coup.
Yet, despite Washington’s belated justification for overthrowing
Saddam Hussein as a victory for democracy, why is there no sign
of joyous celebration among Arabs aspiring for democratic rule?
The sad answer is that most Arab intellectuals view the
evolution of this elected government in Iraq as giving a bad
name to democracy and setting back the cause.
It is true that a consensus among observers of the Arab world
holds that over the past decade or so there has been some
movement toward liberalisation in the region. The advance — more
marked in the economic and informational fields than in politics
— is unrelated to the US invasion and occupation of Iraq.
Instead, there is growing opinion to the contrary, that
authoritarian and semi-authoritarian Arab regimes are using
Washington’s faltering project to resist political reform.
Like the rest of the world, Arab countries have been affected by
the economic globalisation movement that gathered momentum with
the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991 and the transformation
of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade into the World
Trade Organisation in January 1995 under the tutelage of
powerful Western economies. Globalisation has loosened the grip
that the dictatorial and semi-dictatorial Arab states have
traditionally maintained over the economy.
Equally, the arrival of the Internet and satellite television
during the latter half of the 1990s has undermined the monopoly
over information that most Arab governments had arrogated for
themselves. The launching of the Doha-based Aljazeera satellite
TV with a powerful C-band transponder in 1997, followed by the
abolition of censorship by Qatar’s ruler His Highness Shaikh
Hamad bin Khalifa Al Thani in 1998, broke the long-established
mould of state-managed news in the Arab Middle East.
Aljazeera also pioneered no-holds-barred talk shows, one-on-one
debates and investigative journalism of the sort not witnessed
in the region before or since. The network broke taboos by
interviewing Israelis and inviting them to participate in
debates, and tackling such controversial issues as the role of
religion in politics and the existence or otherwise of God. At
one time or another, almost all of the Arab states have closed
down the local Aljazeera bureaus in protest of the editorial
policies. Yet audience figures of some 35 million in the
Arabic-speaking world have so impressed their governments that
they, too, have tried to incorporate some of Aljazeera’s
features — one-on-one debates and investigative journalism — to
spice up their own output. Similarly, the information explosion
from the early 1990s onward has impacted the Arab world.
Internet use has become quite common among middle and
upper-middle classes who matter most in politics. And there has
been a mushrooming of satellite television channels.
The governments try to control information sources by blocking
websites and banning satellite dishes. But those savvy with
Internet technology invariably find ways to circumvent the
barriers. And over time, satellite dishes have become small
enough to be mounted indoors. Yet these laudable technological
developments have proved insufficient to prime a vigorous
movement for political liberalisation, committed to creating a
representative government through periodic elections and a
choice of political parties.
Perhaps what is missing is a catalyst to transform economic
liberalisation and the information explosion into a powerful
instrument for political reform.
Those who loudly advocated an invasion of Iraq by the US
confidently predicted a scenario of democratic Iraq in the
post-Saddam Hussein era becoming a beacon of democracy, good
government and rule of law for the rest of the Arab world. Three
years after the overthrow, the reality is chaos and violence.
Two elections have exposed the sectarian and ethnic fault lines
of the Iraqi society that had been masked by the iron hand of
the Baath Party and Saddam Hussein.
The Bush administration compounded its ignorance of the culture
and history of Iraq with its staggeringly disastrous policy of
not just toppling the Saddam Hussein regime, but also smashing
the state machinery by letting all the ministries, except oil,
be looted and burnt by the mobs and — worse still, instantly
disbanding the military, police and intelligence apparatus.
The vacuum, created by the dissolution of the Baath Party and
the coercive organs of the state, was quickly filled by the
hitherto extensive underground network of the Shia religious
establishment. The militias of the Shia religious parties
followed, including the leading one established in Teheran
during the 1980-1988 Iran-Iraq War.
The subsequent elections enabled the Shia parties to consolidate
their positions by securing popular mandates. The same happened
in the case of the two main Kurdish parties. Finding themselves
marginalised, minority Sunnis — sulking over the loss of power
in Iraq after more than 350 years — also opted for parties based
on sectarian loyalties. By now sectarian or ethnic identity has
superseded the national identity. Unlike Kurds, ethnically
different from Arabs who have traditionally been the inhabitants
of the northeastern mountainous region, Sunni and Shia Arabs
have co-habited the Mesopotamian plains since the rise of Islam
in the 7th century.
Greater Baghdad, accounting for a quarter of the national
population, has been a mosaic of Sunni, Shia and mixed
neighbourhoods. Now the mixed Sunni-Shia districts are turning
into single-sect neighbourhoods. The mosques that once attracted
both Sunni and Shia worshippers now no longer do so. There are
already Shia checkpoints and Sunni checkpoints, with many Iraqis
equipping themselves with two sets of identity documents. For
their protection, Shia Baghdadis turn to the uniformed police or
army whose personnel are mostly Shia. Conversely, their Sunni
counterparts call on the local Sunni vigilantes for protection.
This state of affairs combined with the recent floating of
partitioning Iraq by some American defence experts has provided
powerful ammunition to authoritarian Arab regimes resistant to
political reform. They warn that the American model of democracy
will tear apart national identity and create divisive sectarian
and ethnic identities, turning the region into mini-states along
the post-Yugoslavia model.
This argument resonates with many Arab intellectuals. They
realise that every major Arab country is susceptible to such a
carve-up. In Syria, for instance, Sunnis are only two thirds of
the population, the rest being Alawi, a sub-sect within Shia
Islam, as well as Druze and Christian. In Egypt, the most
homogenous major Arab state, almost 10 per cent of the
population is Christian. In Saudi Arabia, 8 per cent of the
population is Shia, with almost all based in the oil-rich
Eastern province and victims of official discrimination.
Also helping the authoritarian and semi-authoritarian Arab
regimes is the intense anti-Washington sentiment prevalent
throughout the Muslim world due to the Bush administration’s
invasion of Iraq. The regimes have little difficulty in
marginalising the advocates of political liberalisation by
describing them as allies of the much-hated Bush White House,
often branding them as unpatriotic. All in all, instead of
initiating and aiding a democratic wave in the Arab world,
Bush’s invasion of Iraq has inadvertently achieved the opposite
result.
Dilip Hiro is the author of Secrets and Lies:
Operation Iraqi Freedom and After and The Iranian Labyrinth
Journeys Through
Theocratic Iran and Its Furies, both published by Nation Books.
He wrote this article for the Yale Center for the Study of Globalisation
© 2006 Khaleej Times All Rights Reserved.
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