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Who
Wants Democracy Anyway?
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Sharon:
Democratically-elected war criminal?
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In
recent weeks a number of key right-wing Israelis and their
supporters have been pressing hard on the idea of the need for
bringing democracy to the Arab world. At first sight, this seems a
puzzling thing to do. Why would they want the will of the people, in
places such as Iraq, to determine the country's politics? Surely,
many must have thought, this runs counter to many decades of
pressure from the Zionists to prop up anti-democratic or
pseudo-democratic regimes in the Arab world as the best defense they
can have against angry Muslim populations who see their brothers and
sisters in Islam being brutally robbed of their homes, businesses,
land, and lives in Palestine? Indeed it does. So what is going on?
Well,
the war that the Israelis so desperately want on Iraq is becoming an
ever-harder argument to make. The double standards about enforcing
UN resolutions are just too glaring. The only way anyone might claim
that these are not double standards is to say that they have one
standard for democratic countries and one standard for undemocratic
countries. Of course, historically, this is a blatant lie. But,
never mind, we can begin our new policy now: Preemptive strikes on
all non-democratic states.
Frankly
though, most people will recognize this for what it is: a ploy. The
United States is not going to spend hundreds of billions of dollars
overthrowing someone they don't like just to allow the people to
elect someone else they don't like. Someone who would want US troops
and companies to leave as soon as possible. Someone who may be even
more belligerent towards Israel. For example, if the newly elected
leader were to announce a program to develop weapons of mass
destruction to deter Israel from further aggression, what would the
US do? What would those Israelis, so vocal for democracy in the Arab
world, say then?
This
is just another feeble attempt to cover the blatant double standard
that US foreign policy has held to for the last few decades. The
blatant bias towards Israel and against her enemies is the reason
why the Muslim world has not been subjected to pressure from the US
to develop properly democratic forms of government, with all the
benefits they bring. In fact, the pressure has often been in the
opposite direction. The lack of democracy in the Arab world is a
direct result of the double standard the US has been applying. It is
not, as the Israelis are disingenuously claiming, the cause of the
"apparent" double standard.
Whatever
UN resolutions Saddam has defied, whatever crimes he has committed
and gotten away with, it will be easy enough for the people of Iraq
to claim that they were done "not in my name". This excuse
cannot be made of the Israelis, who vote in their leaders. If
sanctions hurt the people of Iraq, who cannot vote out their leader,
it is wanton harming of innocents. If sanctions were put on Israel
to change their government and its policies, it would be direct
punishment and pressure on those who actually approved of all the
crimes of their elected government, and any claim that it was
harming the innocents would therefore be rubbish.
Lamaan
Ball is the editor of the Ask
About Islam page of IslamOnline. He is also the founder and
author of Investigating
Islam.
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