A day to day acount of the whacky and wonderful world of Muggaz - i tend to be having too much fun these days, and often cannot remember moments due to debauchery - its time the internet repayed my loyalty by recording my antics.
This article is spot on
Published on July 1, 2004 By Muggaz In Politics
Day in, day out, I struggle to articulate my thoughts and beleifs on the Middle East. I love it when others do it for me.

The President is right about the lack of freedom in the Middle East, but wrong about its causes, says Jonathan Freedland.

George Bush may not have read much history, but he likes making it. The recent run of insider accounts of the Bush White House show the President is a man with a constant eye on the historians of the future, anxious to lend every moment just enough semi-Churchillian gravitas to make him look good in the decades to come.

So it was on Monday when he was handed a note that declared "Iraq is sovereign", immediately scrawling on it "Let Freedom Reign!" - as if ready for instant display behind the glass case at the future George W. Bush presidential library.

Those three words confirm how Bush sees himself and how he wants to be seen in the future - as a latter-day George Washington, leading subject peoples to liberty.

He has in mind not only the Iraqi nation but all the people of what he calls the Greater Middle East. The "liberation of Baghdad" is but the first step towards the transformation of the entire region.

It is not a secret plan, contained only in classified memorandums. On the contrary, Bush has declared it loud and proud, returning to the theme again in Istanbul on Tuesday. He articulated it most clearly in a November 2003 speech to America's National Endowment for Democracy where he set out how, though there were now 120 functioning democracies in the world, the wave of self-rule had barely touched the Middle East. Democracy had made inroads in Latin America and Asia, but had still failed to make a dent in the Arab world. Why not, the President asked: "Are the peoples of the Middle East somehow beyond the reach of liberty? Are millions of men and women and children condemned by history or culture to live in despotism?"

The images of abuse in Abu Ghraib alone would disqualify America as a credible bringer of democracy to the Middle East.Bush went on to reject such "cultural condescension", insisting that liberty was universal. He called on the Arab states to open up - to respect the rule of law, recognise the equal rights of women and allow political pluralism and free speech.

For my money, it was the best speech Bush has ever given because, on this fundamental point, he is surely right. One has only to flick through the 2002 joint report of the United Nations Development Program and the Arab Fund for Economic and Social Development to see why.

This document, written by a group of Arab intellectuals, bursts with findings as stunning as they are bleak. All 22 Arab states combined, oozing as they are with natural resources and the black gold that is oil, still have a gross domestic product smaller than Spain's and less than half that of California. Education is in a dire state: the whole Arab world translates around 300 books annually, one-fifth the number translated by Greece alone. Rates of internet connection, the Arab scholars found, were less than those in sub-Saharan Africa.

What's more, the Palestinians of the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza are not the only Arabs to be denied fundamental democratic rights. Using the widely accepted "freedom index" - which assesses everything from civil liberties to government accountability and a free press - the Arab states come at the foot of the global league table. The report was especially damning on the exclusion of women, often denied the vote and access to a basic education: "Sadly the Arab world is largely depriving itself of the productivity and creativity of half its citizens."

Bush was right to draw attention to this story of oppression and failure. Nor can he be faulted for placing it in the context of his war against al-Qaeda. For if bin Ladenism feeds off anything, it is surely the frustration and despair of those who have to live in such suffocating conditions.

If the right approach to the current global conflict is the one advocated by the likes of Bill Clinton - tough on terror, tough on the causes of terror - then surely the foremost "cause" is the desperate state of the Arab world. So Bush is right in identifying the problem. Where he is wrong is in understanding its causes - and in finding a solution.

To his credit, the President does not imagine some innate Muslim or Arab incapacity for self-government: he attributes such attitudes to his enemies. But he speaks as if the Arab world became a desert for democracy through some strange act of nature, a freak accident with no rational explanation besides the evil rule of a couple of twisted dictators. What neither he, nor Tony Blair for that matter, ever acknowledges is the West's own culpability.

One does not have to be a placard-waving anti-imperialist to note that for nearly a century the Arab world has been on the receiving end of constant Western meddling. If they have not got on with choosing their own governments, that's partly because we kept (and keep) stopping them!

Iraq is a case in point, as Britain repeatedly, from the 1920s to the 1950s, ensured the regime was to its liking. That pattern has been repeated across the region, from the tiny emirates created by a stroke of a Western pen, to mighty Egypt: first Britain and then America has always plotted and connived to secure a friendly face at the top, even if the price has been the denial of the people's will.

So Bush's rhetoric is all very well, but it would ring truer if it entailed an explicit renunciation of that colonial habit.

And this is not ancient history. The US still props up hideous, human rights-abusing regimes so long as the top man remains "our son of a bitch". Look no further than Bush's closest chums, the ruling family of Saudi Arabia. When Bush severs his links with the House of Saud over their beheadings, oppression of women, rank corruption and denial of basic human freedom, then his words will have meaning.

But the President is wrong on the solution too. Democracy only rarely flows down the barrel of a gun. After 1945 Germany and Japan were surely the exceptions in exceptional circumstances. Even putting the 2003 war to one side, the images of abuse in Abu Ghraib alone would disqualify America as a credible bringer of democracy to the Middle East.

Instead that task will have to be performed by other people and in a different way. That does not mean a new European mandate to meddle, but rather a more creative use of influence. The first move will be a withdrawal of support from offending regimes, Riyadh and Cairo among them. Next, aid and trade should be tied to democratic performance. (A cheaper and less lethal way to create a democratic model in the Middle East than invading Iraq was surely to make Egypt's annual $US2 billion ($A2.9 billion) aid package from the US conditional on Cairo sharpening up its act in the liberty department. That would have done the trick, without a shot being fired.) The West could put current Arab and other tyrannies on notice that their only way back into the global community is not simply to arrest al-Qaeda suspects, but to grant basic freedoms to their own people.

Do that and then Bush will have every right to his Washingtonian rhetoric. He can chant "Let freedom reign" at the top of his voice. But not till then.

BAM!!!

Comments
on Jul 01, 2004
"The images of abuse in Abu Ghraib alone would disqualify America as a credible bringer of democracy to the Middle East"


So you can't make any mistakes? If you aren't perfect, you must swallow any aspirations, do nothing, and hope a new messiah is born? I'm unaware of any Democracy that isn't frought with problems. Isn't that what free will is all about? If perfection was necessary no one could have stopped any foreign abuses, and no one could have affected change, even in their own nation.




The fact is every world power had a hand in the current mess in the Middle East. All of them sought to make it an imperial posession. There was a substantial history of meddling by European empires before America even existed. No one is morally pure.

Do you really think you can isolate the Middle East and effect change? Isn't that just what Al Qaeda and others want? A declining Middle East with no strong external ties plays right into the hands of fundamentalists and hateful megalomaniacs like bin Laden. Isn't what you propose exactly what the world did to Afghanistan? A lot of rhetoric, a lot of cold shoulders. You can't assume that other nations will go the way of Libya, nor can you assume Libya is even remotely changed by their new "attitude".

Most of these nations are already isolated, and you think the absence of the US makes a difference? No, because if we aren't there, China will be, or France, or any number of other opportunistic folks without the silly idea that they aren't morally pure enough to take the reins. You seem to be able to understand the concept of "power vacuum" in Iraq, but not Saudi Arabia or other Middle Eastern nations? There is such a thing as an "influence vacuum" as well.



on Jul 01, 2004
Who is saying that the USA should revoke all ties to these nations? It's merely a different approach to solving the same problem...

If the US bases it's aid provision on democratic performance, why wouldn't everyone be happy with that solution?

Personally, I am Australian, and I beleive the USA is more tha capable of bringing democracy to the middle east, and basically assisting in improving the quality of life over there... however, because of the prison debacle, the citizens of the middle east can be forgiven for not trusting the US...

As for Libya... I am so moved by their attempts for peace, that I am a little offended that you take the cynical viewpoint... cant anyone make 'mistakes' Baker?

BAM!!!
on Jul 02, 2004
You have to see, though, that the Middle East would see it as starving those we disagree with. The worst nations, most in need of change, would suddenly become the most susceptable to radical interests. Stable nations, like the oft-villified Saudi Arabia are of course breeding grounds for terrorists, but this comes more from the radical ideologies that are allowed to flourish. The comfort level there is huge. You think the radical clerics there would have a harder time if the Saud family lost our support?

I'm not so concerned with the governments being forced to change, as the fact that our lack of support would weaken them in a time that we desperately need them to be solid. You can't forget that bin Ladens main goal is the radicalization of secular governments. So, less foreign support, less prosperity, more discontent, more ears for radical Islam to turn.

You also ignore the fact that China and others would simply fill the vacuum we leave. What good would it to be to punitively remove support from nations when others will rush in and take advantage of our absense. Don't forget what happened when Iraq fell out of favor with the US. Hussein was vastly more powerful once he found new "partners" with less scruples.





As for Libya, I would suggest you look at *everything* Qaddafi has had to say of late, not just the one act of shunning WMD programs. He is more nationalistic and anti-semitic than ever. This is a nation currently bent on putting international AIDS workers to death for spreading the disease. Qaddafi is a leader who refers to Israel as "the Zionist enemy", and is even so petty as to bar Israel's chess champion from competing in the international chess championship there.

As for peace Qaddafi said recently that there wasn't much to be done about American or British occupation in Iraq, but the Arab world should retaliate against Italy and other small nations that support the effort. Did you see his speeches at the recent Arab League debacle? Do you reject completely the accusation that he was plotting to assassinate the crown prince in Saudi Arabia? Do you think he will stop contributing to Hamas and the other terrorist groups?

Believe what you want. He seems as hateful and nutty as ever to me.
on Jul 02, 2004
You think the radical clerics there would have a harder time if the Saud family lost our support?


What do you think is more important to the Saud Royal family? Letting terrorist ideoligies flourish? Or international support and oil money?

I have some faith in the Arabs, that their governments would value international support and acceptance over any possible problems with internal factions...

Why dont we make the middle eastern govenrment's responsible for cleaning their own backyards, rather than western powers being criticised for interventionalist tactics...

I know it is harsh, but how many methods have been tried when it comes to defeating terrorism? This is not just an American problem... as an Australian, I also have faith in the UN... surely madates could be created to prevent the obvious power vacumn problems? I dont know... just tossing ideas in the air!

BAM!!!
on Jul 02, 2004
We differ on the power of UN resolutions. I would really like to see the destruction of Al Qaeda before there is much turmoil in nations like Saudi Arabia. I think it is far, far more important to see religious reform in the Middle East than political reform. Not much we can do about that, though. Until then I say if it ain't broke don't fix it.

With the possible exceptio of Iran, I don't see a lot of room to engineer change. I don't think the populations of the other nations are nearly disgruntled enough, and if they are it is from an anti-secularist stance.
on Jul 02, 2004
great article muggaz! every so often im unable (despite my best efforts) to avoid the inevitable imposition of forced labor...and i havent been around much for the past 10 days or so. the transitional orchestration during the nato session (i dont know if you saw a clip of the iraqi envoy to the nato thing mentioning the accellerated timetable in front of blair before the meeting during which the note was passed to bush, but ooops he sure let the cat out of the bag; amazingly blair didnt react at all...apparently he didnt notice the bag, much less the kitties) was a perfect example of why bush is the wrong man for the job if, in fact, this was the right job.

one of the most irritating things about watching 'bush & the neocons' is the act's lack of finesse. even if you think im stupid (and they obviously dont limit that opinion to just me), youre less likely to win my approval if you make your opinion obvious. if it dont work for me, its really gonna bomb when you take that show on the road to a less-than-impressed-from-the-jump audience in the middle east made up of people who are already positive you think theyre stupid based on the past 50 years of previous bookings.
on Jul 02, 2004
Stable nations, like the oft-villified Saudi Arabia are of course breeding grounds for terrorists, but this comes more from the radical ideologies that are allowed to flourish. The comfort level there is huge

you truly think saudi arabia is stable or comfortable for the majority of citizens who arent members of the royal family?

you must have wondered how those terrorists who took over that housing complex at the end of may managed to vanish into thin air. or how those other terrorists who beheaded the guy from new jersey were so uncatchable til after the fact. ive never been there but what ive seen on tv and in films the place looks like mostly highways and sand once you get outside the cities. i guess you could maybe disguise yourself by wrapping up in sandpaper but otherwise it didnt sppear a great place to play hide-and-go-seek. or at least not a place where youd win easily without some insider help.

how many non-royal saudi males are employed? how many of them can afford to marry?
on Jul 02, 2004
I have no doubt that Saudi Arabia is an antagonistic place to foreigners, I never said it wasn't. Radical Islam has a lot of sympathy there, and no doubt that is why these attacks went off as smoothly as they did.

As for the stability of the government, I'm not aware of any overt opposition. Do you think that punitive action by western nations would make the Saud family more apt to start holding elections, or do you think they would further feed off the nation and cause more pain and hardship?

I don't like the Saudi system, I never said I did. I think that the days of such nations are numbered. Saudi Arabia differs from Iraq, though, in that there isn't a huge population sitting on the verge of revolt. If such a revolt DID come to pass, we would most assuredly not like the results, because it more assuredly wouldn't be a secular nation.

Iraq is for the most part a secular country, with decades of secular rule behind it. Saudi Arabia is ruled by Islamic law, and has a very united, often radicalized population. If you can imagine the overthow of the Saud family with something kinder and gentler coming after, elaborate, because I can't.

Apples and Oranges, not unlike the North Korea/Iraq foolishness that gets harped on constantly.

on Jul 02, 2004
im not aware of any overt opposition within the kingdom either. any visible signs of stuff like that triggers repression (which makes the current amnesty--as opposed to the previous amnesty--sorta perplexing).

as far as the mysteriously vanishing terrorists go, remember saudi is a small kingdom with a notorious state security apparatus. what i was trying to determine was whether it struck you--as it did me since it is about the third time this year its happened--someone on the inside must be, if not actively working with them, providing them with protection. it has a lot less to do with antagonism towards foreigners (i think) than sending a message to the royals.

two messages actually. the other one being...whatcha gonna do if we scare alll the foreigners off? without non-saudi nationals to run the refineries and maintain all the rest of their technology, they'd be pretty much dead in the desert. since all the grunt work is done by imported labor as well, anyone with half a brain would grab a tent and his camel and get outta dodge.

part of the reason for their need for foreign skills is they waste half their brains. like the ones inside womens' heads. saudi women (to her credit one woman who was beaten badly by her husband went on tv and shamed the royals into permitting her to do what for them is a groundbreaking show on saudi tv aimed at the kingdoms women--her husband ended up in jail and she divorced him) arent permitted to drive or work outside the home.

as far as as overthrowing the house of saud, theres really not much need unless youre in a hurry. i cant think of another regime thats on similarly shaky ground altho the romanovs, circa 1917 is pretty close. there are many more non-royals than royals. most of them are underemployed (not qualified to do what the educated foreigners do, not willing do do what the uneducated foreigners do), unable to afford a wife or any of the high-tech toys the princes have. im not sure how it works for city dwellers but the bedouins line up regularly to meet with their benefactor prince who hands out cash and favors in return for their fealty.

there are only two things preventing the implosion from happening later today. one is the us. it may seem as if we're dependent on them but thats a mirage. the other is their claim to being the only legitimate guardians of the two shrines (mekka and medina) and they make sure everyone knows theyre governing according to sharia or the wahabbi cult flavor. thats at least part of the reason for all those public and televised hand amputations and beheadings. (the terrorists have taken that page from the saudi justice system; i dont think its unreasonable to consider they chose that particular method of dispatching hostages, knowing it would seem extremely barbarous to us and yet not unfamiliar to middle eastern arabs for whom its sorta the equivalent of the electric chair)



on Jul 02, 2004
The images of abuse in Abu Ghraib alone would disqualify America as a credible bringer of democracy to the Middle East.


That's a stupid statement. A handful of criminal soldiers doesn't reflect an entire nation.

The Saudi regime definitely has to change. The article is very right that Western nations need to stop propping up dictatorships.
on Jul 02, 2004
Madine: if we don't prop them up, someone else will, and if they fall and no one but Islamic extremists step up to replace them, we'll like it even less. Iraq was a secular nation, with a rule of law that wasn't strictly Islamic. Saudi Arabi's legal system is strictly Islamic law, and radical Islam is barely controlled there. I think you would find the results of revolution or liberation in Saudi to be vastly different. than Iraq.

I don't like them either, but frankly a nation with 25% of the world's oil reserve and the largest producer of oil is not something you want to monkey with. The oil and vast wealth that is available to the people who control it could be a weapon in and of itself.

It's like North Korea, as I said. They may be equally oppressive, but the risk to the world is far, far greater than removing Hussein from power. Risking tens of millions of casualties fighting North Korea, or the ransoming and misuse of the vast wealth and oil of Saudi Arabia isn't worth it when the people of the nations don't to want to be liberated. Iraq was one of the only nations you could look to for a population yearning to be free of a patently evil dictator.

Evil as the others may be, they have done a good job brainwashing and bribing their populations.
on Jul 02, 2004
I didn't mean that we needed to pull the rug out right away. I meant that in the long term, our strategy needs to be for there to be change in Saudi Arabia. Obviously we can't just go around knocking over governments left and right.