What we have learned is that a
multicultural regime cannot be easily imposed except over decades. Turning out one regime however desirable
simply changes perceived masters. A functioning
democracy will step by step ameliorate this problem but that is hardly
understood on the ground.
The Arab spring has unleashed a
series of civil wars to establish somewhat of a new order. Quite rightly, our only sensible role is to
establish the framework of a democracy and get out of the way to let time grind
out the problems. We only have to look
today to see a newly assertive middle class finally putting pressure on
Putin. The truth be told, almost every
successful demos goes through this extended messy changeover.
We all know the end game, it is
simply a gross mistake to think that a citizen can even imagine that today and
when the guns bark he must run to his source of personal strength in the clan.
It may not look like progress but
in fact it is. However fanatical the
politicians are in Egypt ,
the military is not about to commit suicide again by attacking Israel . The politicians also need to modernize the
economy so that quickly drains their options away anyway. Twenty years from now, this crowd will all be
gone anyway and a rising middle class will block adventurism.
The real change is that we now
have change and that game we all win.
Taking Down Assad Will Not Save Syria
After September 11, the reasonable thing to do would have been to take
steps to save ourselves from Islamic terror. Instead, we went on a crusade to
save Muslims from themselves. The latest stop on that crusade is Syria ,
where the foreign policy experts responsible for decades of horrifying
misjudgments tell us that we are duty bound to save the Syrian people from
their dictator.
Rarely do we ask why it is that Muslims so often need saving from their
dictators. Or why a party that campaigned on improving America’s reputation by
promising not to bomb Muslims anymore, is now improving America’s reputation by
bombing so many Muslims and so often that it makes George W. Bush look like a
tie-dyed hippie.
The Obama Administration has had a role in regime change in Egypt , Tunisia
and Libya
all in one year. Along with the other “Friends of Syria ”
it would like to bomb its way to regime change in Syria . The point of all this regime
change is to replace totalitarian Muslim regimes with democratically elected
totalitarian Muslim regimes on the theory that will make everyone happier.
The reason why Muslim countries end up with dictators can be seen in
the streets of Libya where militias run wild and former members of the regime
and anyone with black skin is dragged off the street for torture sessions and a
bullet in the back of the head. Peel away the presidents, colonels and other
suit-wearing tyrants fronting for an oligarchy, and that is what every Muslim
country will be reduced to.
To understand the problem with Syria ,
one only need look at neighboring Lebanon where every attempt at
coalition building between different religious and ethnic groups has gone badly
over and over again. The ruling Alawites have to hang on to power because the
alternative is to be an oppressed minority. The Sunnis have to strive for power
because the alternative is to be an oppressed minority. This pattern repeats
itself across the region.
To the extent that Western multiculturalism works, it does so
because Europeans and their descendants have agreed to cede some power and
privileges to minority groups while maintaining confidence in the rule of law
to protect equal rights for everyone. Such a state of affairs is
ridiculously inconceivable in the countries that we are assuming will adopt
that same value system.
The only form of protection for a minority in the Muslim world is to
either seize power or form a coalition with the ruling party. Such coalitions
are inherently fragile because tribal instincts of race and religion always end
up overriding agreements. Mohammed’s treaties weren’t worthless just because he
was a duplicitous power-mad figure, but because all treaties are worthless in
the region. After his death, Islamic succession wound up being settled with
assassination and civil war among his own family members and allies.
Muslims look to Islam as a central unifying principle of universal
allegiance, but it’s nothing of the sort. It’s actually an excuse for constant
internecine violence. Islam adds another layer of allegiances and another
excuse for infighting that did not exist previously. Underneath the robes and
beards and Korans is yet another oligarchy with family mafias clutching their
ill-gotten gains, as is the case in Iran
and as will be the case in Egypt ,
where the Brotherhood has already gotten a head start.
Under conditions like this how can democracy exist as anything other
than a temporary state of affairs? When there is an overwhelming majority in
favor of one religion, it becomes nothing more than a rubber stamp for tyrants,
as was the case in the Egyptian elections. When the country is sufficiently
divided along religious lines, as is the case in Iraq , it becomes a prolonged
struggle with both sides marking their positions and building their coalitions
in preparation for a civil war.
Acting as if all this can be resolved with a few lessons on democracy
is absurd, especially when such problems linger on even in the countries doing
the teaching; just ask the Flemish or the Basque. Nations can only overcome
such divisions when they have shared higher values to strive for. The only
“higher value” there is Islam, and it is only another source of sectarian
strife.
The modern state did not emerge overnight in Europe and while the
colonization of the Middle East has left behind the facades of modern states which
employ some of the ritual and custom of their colonizers, they are not modern
states. Often they are not even states at all. They are clans operating in
cities built for them by foreigners, using technology sold to them by
foreigners and going through the motions of a republic built for them by
foreigners.
Behind the facade, the clan trumps the state, religion trumps the state
and the state exists mainly as a vehicle for the ambitions of influential
families who run the whole thing for their own benefit while providing some
subsidies to the rest of the country. Overthrow one family and another rises in
its place. Some will be more horrid than others. Saddam was a monster even by
the standards of the region. The Assads are worse than some, but better than
others.
Taking down Assad will not save Syria . It will transfer power from
the Alawites, a Shiite splinter sect, to the Sunnis and the Muslim Brotherhood.
This won’t just be bad for the Alawites; it will be bad for the Christians and
the other minorities still in Syria .
In Egypt ,
the ethnic cleansing of the Copts has already begun, though the media won’t
comment on it. In Syria
there have already been some militia attacks. And it will only get worse.
Only one calculation should be used to determine whether we remove
Assad from power and that is whether removing him from power will be good for
us. It has been amply demonstrated to us that we cannot save Muslims from
themselves. We cannot drag them a thousand years ahead in time just because
they use cell phones and have prime ministers. Externally imposing progress
does not work. Especially across cultures that have to make their own
adaptations and their own journeys upwards.
The misbegotten crusade to save Muslims from themselves, to act as
missionaries of democracy, has cost us more lives than September 11 and to no
purpose. There was something noble about the belief that we could march our
troops in, liberate a people from their tyrant, and their spirits would open up
and a new world would be born. That belief, however, was rooted in a
secularized religious ideal that was layered over with American exceptionalism.
But the whole point of exceptionalism is that it is not universal. America is not
the inevitable outcome. It is a series of accommodations and experiments that
derive from a particular set of histories. It cannot be generalized or
universally applied.
We cannot save Muslims from themselves. We can, however, save ourselves
from their turmoil, their religiously influenced violence and their cultural
instability. The more we try to reach out to them, the more we are at risk of
importing their violence and instability.
The job of governments is not to sell our way of life to others. It is
to protect that way of life from others. It is about time that we stopped being
the world’s benefactor, psychiatrist and policeman, and began looking after our
own interests first. That doesn’t mean isolationism. It doesn’t rule our
friendships with other countries, but those friendships should be in our
interest.
Like the homeowner who kicks out his family and fills his living room
with drug addicts from the street, for too long the United States has pandered
to the violent dysfunction of troubled countries and peoples, while neglecting
its interests and allies. It has all but abandoned its traditional ties and
become obsessed with fixing trouble spots. These bouts of social work have been
expensive and they have not worked.
It’s time that we stopped trying to save people from themselves and
began trying to save ourselves. While we have been teaching good government to
others, our own government has become rotten. While we have spent money on
others, we are running out of money. While we have taken in the huddled masses
of the world yearning to take us for all we’ve got, our own lives and families
are in danger.
A new age of terror is here. It’s time to face up to it. To stop saving
Muslims from themselves and to work to save ourselves and our kin from them.
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