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in re ZNet on DEMOCRACY (fwd)
by Andre Gunder Frank
02 April 2003 15:29 UTC
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yesterday at lunch i told Ali that i was thinking of writing an article on
how the US is the greatest force AGAINST democracy in the world.
She said its not worth doing, because its already been done. Here below is
an example that proves her right. But i had a number of other details to add,
eg Patriot Acts 1 and 2, the first passed without Congress even reading
it, and the second so far withheld from Congress, to be pushed through in
anti-terrosim and pro war fever. The shredding of the Bill of Rights and
the abrogation of the Constitution. Canada, UK, Germany, France, et
al are rushing to keep up with the US in this regard at home. [Of all
"western denocracies"  the ""Mother of  Democrcy" in the UK is surely the
most UNdemocratic and repressive of all - just ask the Cahtolics in
Northern Ireland]. 

I would expand on the author's mention of arm twisting blackmail vs
governments that want to follow the democratically
expressed opinions of their people instead of  doing what the US wants,
which cares a hoot in hell about democracy or its exercise. It did not
support the democratic opposition to Saddam Hussein in 1991. The US has 
run the UN with a half century of carrots and sticks against every
democratically elected and othewise client government in the world to
assure their votes on the most outrageous US propositions. When some
international porpositions were adoped anyway, the US first fought them 
and got them watered down so it might sign, then refused to sign and or 
ratify, and/or abrogated them, eg Kyoto, Internatinal Criminal Court, land
mines, etc. And after Elanor Roosevelt wrote the UN Declaratin of Human 
Rights, US governments have  opposed to EVERY human rights measure brought
pefore an international assembly. 

Apart from the questionable relevance of the arguments the author considers
about post-WW II Japan and Germany, if anyone can find even a single case
of US intervention having led to or resulted in any kind of democracy
during the last half - or whole - century, I would like to be informed
about it. With a century's democratic batting average of 0.00, the
prospects for the next time are, well just about 0.00.  

One relevant item I have never seen mentioned - except by me, are there
any others i could cite? - is the wholesale abrogation of any and all
Democracy in the NATO war against Yugoslavia. Not a single parliament was
consulted in any of the NATO member states about making that war. It also
violated the constitutions of various member statees, eg USA, Germany to
start with. The Canadian Prime Minster went so far as to declare publicly
that he can NOT afford to bring this question to the Canadian parliament,
because there would be some opposing voicees - and that would give comfort
to the Milosevic enemey. In other words, 'we' are anxiuous and willing to
give up all of our democracy at home to fight an illegal war abroad.
Moreover, his Defense Minister then stated that Canada would fight to
defend ''human rights'' wherever and whenever no matter what the United
Nations and international law had to say about it. 

I would lay greater stress on internatinal law and institutions, the
foundation and expression of international democracy to the limited extent
that we have any, all of which have been discarded by the US, which has
replaced them by the "Law of the West" [that is a play on words! of two
senses of the word West!!] forming vigilante posses to go after
self-defined criminals.

If democracy and international law, plus the Geneva Concentions, were
designed to maintain some semblance of civilized association and living,
both domestically and globally, then the wholsale abrogation of democracy
also represents a rejection of civilization.  The cynical hypocritical
Blair/Bush evocations of "" fighing to save civilization"" are tantamount
to the US Vietnam War policy and practice of ''we have to destroy it to save
it''. Alas they are having a hard time of it, because these most precious
fruits of civilization exist no more even to be destroyed, let alone
to be saved. Nor does democracy. RIP. 



    ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

               ANDRE    GUNDER      FRANK

Senior Fellow                                      Residence
World History Center                    One Longfellow Place
Northeastern University                            Apt. 3411
270 Holmes Hall                         Boston, MA 02114 USA
Boston, MA 02115 USA                    Tel:    617-948 2315
Tel: 617 - 373 4060                     Fax:    617-948 2316
Web-page:csf.colorado.edu/agfrank/     e-mail:franka@fiu.edu

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Tue, 1 Apr 2003 17:35:02 -0500
From: Michael Albert <sysop@ZMAG.ORG>
To: znetupdates@zmail.zmag.org
Subject: Update & Commentary from ZNet 

Hello,

This is another ZNet Free Update Mailing. In wartime we are sending many
more than usual. As always, you can add and remove addresses at the top
page of ZNet -- www.zmag.org/weluser.htm

---

(1) The Stand for Peace and Justice statement with many ZNet writers as
initial signers has about 40,000 signers in only five days and the pace
shows no sign of waning. Have you signed it yet? If not, you can read
the statement and add your name at http://www.zmag.org/wspj/index.cfm
More important, from that site you can also mail copies to others, or
you can print them for use in organizing work. Many people are asking
their organizations to print and/or link to the statement. Newspapers
around the world seem to be spontaneously doing so.

(2) Today's Free Update article is by Stephen Shalom and is titled War
and Democracy. It is from the April print issue of Z Magazine which is
now online via www.zmag.org To acccess the print edition online,
however, you have to subscribe to the online version which you can
easily do so at the site. It is helpful to us if you do so, of course.

Regular updates to Znet more broadly are continuing multiple times
daily, and use is skyrocketing. We have made hardware changes that will
keep pace, we hope.

And, finally, here is Stephen Shalom's article -- he is a ZNet
Commentator -- we hope it proves useful to you.



Iraq: War and Democracy

by Stephen R. Shalom
 
I support regime change. I support it around the world, including in
Iraq, where a dictator holds sway. The question, however, is whether we
should support regime change by the United States military and whether
there is any reason to believe that a U.S. invasion will lead to
democracy for the people of Iraq, let alone for the wider region.    

There are many good reasons to be skeptical that a U.S. military assault
will result in any sort of meaningful democracy. First, one only has to
look at who the supposed agent of this democratic flowering is to be:
George W. Bush, who rules the United States illegitimately, having
stolen the 2000 election, and who presides over the most serious assault
on the basic democratic rights of the people of the United States in
over half a century. Second, one should look at the long record of U.S.
foreign policy.  

At the turn of the last century, during the debate over the annexation
of the Philippines, Senator Henry Cabot Lodge declared, if justice
requires the consent of the governed, "then our whole past record of
expansion is a crime."  

Woodrow Wilson proclaimed his devotion to democracy while sponsoring
interventions in Haiti, Nicaragua, and Mexico.  

In 1949, the CIA backed a military coup that deposed the elected
government of Syria.  

In the 1950s, the CIA overthrew the freely-elected, democratic
government of Guatemala and blocked free elections in Vietnam.  

In the 1960s, the United States undermined democracy in Brazil and in
the Congo (the first scrapping of a legally recognized democratic system
in post-colonial Africa). 
 
In 1963, the United States backed a coup by the Ba'ath party in
Iraq-Saddam Hussein's party -and gave them names of communists to kill.


In the 1970s, the CIA helped to snuff out democracy in Chile. As
Kissinger told a top-secret meeting, "I don't see why we need to stand
by and watch a country go Communist due to the irresponsibility of its
own people."   
In 1981, vice-president George Bush Sr. told Philippine dictator
Ferdinand Marcos, "We love your adherence to democratic principle."  

Consider Indonesia, ruled by a dictator, Suharto, who killed more "of
his own people" than did Saddam Hussein (with U.S. arms and, again, with
lists of names of Communists to liquidate). In 1997, the year before the
Indonesian people drove Suharto into exile, Paul Wolfowitz told Congress
that "any balanced judgment of the situation in Indonesia today,
including the very important and sensitive issue of human rights, needs
to take account of the significant progress that Indonesia has already
made and needs to acknowledge that much of this progress has to be
credited to the strong and remarkable leadership of president Suharto."


Consider the report written for Israeli prime minister Benyamin
Netanyahu in 1996 by a group of U.S. neoconservatives, many of whom hold
prominent positions in the current Bush war administration (Richard
Perle, Douglas Feith, and David Wurmser). This report recommended
restoring the Hashemite monarchy to power in Iraq. 
 
There has been little acknowledgment of just how deep U.S. opposition to
democracy has been. So even a New York Times article by Todd Purdum in
March, admitting that the U.S. has not always been a champion of
democracy, says the following: "The first President Bush protested when
a military coup overthrew the democratically elected leader of Haiti,
the Rev. Jean-Bertrand Aristide, but was far less exercised around the
same time when the Algerian Army canceled the second round of elections
that seemed certain to put an Islamic fundamentalist regime in power."  

Purdum is right about Algeria, but his account of Haiti is terribly
misleading. In fact, the U.S. had all sorts of ties to the coup plotters
in Haiti and did all it could to sabotage efforts to remove the junta.

There are other reasons to be skeptical about the democratic impact of
this war: oil contracts, bases, Kurds-plans are being made by the Bush
administration on all these matters, matters that even minimal notions
of democracy would leave to Iraqis. Bush, writes Thomas Powers in the
March 18 New York Times, "will have virtually unlimited power...far
greater power, for example, than Queen Victoria's over India in the 19th
century."  

U.S. officials say the occupation will last at least two years. Powers
notes that the U.S. troops will remain until U.S.-Iranian differences
"are resolved by diplomacy or war, which ever comes first."  

The claim that the U.S. wants to bring democracy to the region is
preposterous. Imagine what democracy in the Middle East today would
mean. Is it conceivable that a Saudi Arabian government that reflected
the views of its people would be providing bases for Washington's war?
Would a democratic Egypt allow U.S. forces to transit the Suez canal?
Would democratic UAE or Qatar or Bahrain be aiding the U.S. war effort?


Consider Turkey: the U.S. was outraged at a parliamentary vote, which
was consistent with the views of 94 percent of population. (The cabinet
had earlier been pressed by Washington into approving a deal before
details were even worked out, hardly a model of democratic practice.)
The Turkish military said it had avoided making a statement before the
parliament's vote because it knew that would be undemocratic, but after
the failed vote it didn't refrain from pressing for a reversal, with
U.S. backing.  

A February 26, 2003 classified State Department report was leaked to the
Los Angeles Times (March 14, 2003). The thrust of the document,
according to a source, was "...this idea that you're going to transform
the Middle East and fundamentally alter its trajectory is not credible."


"Even if some version of democracy took root-an event the report casts
as unlikely-anti-American sentiment is so pervasive that elections in
the short term could lead to the rise of Islamic-controlled governments
hostile to the United States and Electoral democracy, were it to emerge,
could well be subject to exploitation by anti- American elements."  

Bush refers to his "coalition of the willing" and many analysts have
noted that it is a coalition of the coerced and the bribed. But it's
also a coalition of the undemocratic. It is a coalition of governments
whose views do not reflect the views of their people-the basic, minimal
definition of demo- cracy.  

As Colin Powell proudly put it: "We need to knock down this idea that
nobody is on our side." Many nations share our view. "And they do it in
the face of public opposition." (NYT, March 10, 2003)  

Britain, Spain, Italy: in all these countries overwhelming majorities of
the population are opposed to war. Nor are things any different in the
"New Europe." In Bulgaria, for example, the one Security Council
supporter of the U.S.-UK-Spanish position, a January poll showed 59
percent of the population opposed to war in any circumstances and
another 28 percent opposed to war without Security Council backing, with
only 5 percent favoring a unilateral war by the United States and its
allies.  

The only country in the world where a majority of the population
supports war is Israel and this is the one country that is not
officially part of the coalition of the willing (for fear it will drive
some of the willing into becoming unwilling).  

In the United States, there is no decisive voice for war. While the
latest polls seem to show majority support for war, the same polls show
that 60 percent believe the U.S. should take into account the views of
its allies, more want the U.S. to take account of any UN veto than
don't, and 52 percent want the inspectors to be given more time (CBS/NYT
poll, March 7-9). A USA Today poll the weekend of March 15 says that 50
percent oppose war if there is no UN resolution.  

The CBS/NYT poll also shows that 62 percent think the Bush
administration is not telling the public important information it needs
to know, but a plurality believe, contrary to any evidence, that Saddam
Hussein was personally involved in the September 11 terrorist attacks.
This poll data suggests considerable confusion, which is not surprising,
given the government lies, forgeries, plagiarism, and press
self-censorship. (Would public opinion be different if the U.S. press
had given prominent attention to the U.S. spying on the UN or the
suppressed testimony of the Iraqi defector?) Democratic backing doesn't
automatically make a war right, but this will surely be one of the most
undemocratic wars ever waged.  

Some have argued that U.S. policy has yielded democracy before,
specifically in the case of Japan following World War II. The analogy,
however, is unconvincing.   

First, U.S. policy makers maintained the emperor in power, planning to
use his authority to enhance their own control over Japan and to make
sure that they determined the pace and extent of change. This meant that
criticisms of the emperor had to be suppressed. Thus, a left- wing film
critical of the emperor was banned by American officials in 1946.
Anything negative about the emperor was kept out of the Tokyo war crimes
trial.  

In the first few years of the occupation, some genuine democratic
reforms were introduced in Japan: there was land reform, unions were
promoted, the new constitution included a "no war" pledge, some
right-wing militarists were purged, and some of the zaibatsu, the
corporate behemoths of the Japanese economy, were broken up. But these
reforms were carried out by New Dealers, the most liberal U.S.
government in history, while in Iraq we can look forward to rule by the
most reactionary U.S. regime in more than 70 years.   By 1948, as
Washington came to realize that China was not going to become an
anti-communist bastion and that a powerful alternative was needed, U.S.
occupation policy in Japan underwent a "reverse course." Japanese
economic power would now be rebuilt as part of an anti-Soviet alliance
and many of the early reforms were weakened or repealed. War criminals
were released. A threatened general strike was banned in 1947 and over
the next three years imposed laws severely weakening the labor movement.
In 1949, there was a mass purge of Communists, using regulations
originally designed for ultra- right militarists.  

Japan's dominant conservative politicians were allowed to maintain their
grip on power by the U.S. Occupation authorities and were secretly
bankrolled by the CIA through the 1960s.  

The U.S. occupation lasted seven years (and two decades longer for
Okinawa), but before it ended U.S. officials took two more steps to
consolidate Japan as Washington's key ally against communism in Asia.
First, the U.S. obtained military bases in Japan, which they maintain to
this day. Second, they got Tokyo to agree that it would not trade with
the Chinese mainland. For the latter to be feasible, U.S. policy makers
determined that Japan would need to seek what State Department planner
George Kennan called "an empire to the south." U.S. government officials
frankly spoke of sponsoring a new "Co- Prosperity Sphere." This meant
U.S. subversion, counterinsurgency, and massive attack to keep Southeast
Asia in Washington's global economic system. Thus, the war purportedly
fought to defeat aggression and militarism in Asia led to U.S. policies
of aggression and militarism in Asia.  

One final indication of the U.S. view of democracy is its attitude
toward the UN: the organization must follow U.S. orders or Washington
will do what it wants anyway; that the U.S. has the right to openly
bribe other nations to secure their votes; that Washington alone has the
right to interpret UN resolutions; and so on.  

New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman says that he favors war despite
the odds that things will turn out horribly because he thinks it's worth
the long-shot chance for democracy. So even if the likelihood of
democracy emerging is small, isn't that better than nothing? Shouldn't
we take the chance, even if there weren't many tremendous costs of going
to war, such as:  

It will destroy the fragile institutions of international law built up
over the last few decades. (Already Turkey is saying that if the U.S.
can intervene in Iraq to preventively protect its national security, why
can't Ankara?)  
It will increase recruiting for Al Qaeda, as reported in a recent New
York Times  
It will increase, rather than decrease, the spread of weapons of mass
destruction  
It places immense numbers of Iraqi civilians at risk  
There are many grim predictions about civilian casualties from NGOs and
internal UN documents. Fred Kaplan on Slate is right that these are just
guesses, with no solid proof. But the rosy predictions of the Bush
administration are no less guesses and there are reasons to be concerned


Consider that a report in the London Independent, February 2, 2003,
stated, "The Ministry of Defence yesterday admitted the electricity
system that powers water and sanitation for the Iraqi people could be a
military target, despite warnings that its destruction would cause a
humanitarian tragedy."  

U.S. war games were reported (NYT, October 22, 2002) to involve 10
percent casualties among the attacking force in urban warfare in
Baghdad. Can one imagine how many civilians the U.S. will put at risk to
minimize the dangers to its own forces?  

Bush has warned that Saddam Hussein has been interspersing troops and
military targets among the civilian population and that any harm would
be Saddam's fault. But if Bush intends to liberate the Iraqi people from
Saddam, then presumably he views them as hostages, and who would want
hostages liberated by U.S. cruise missiles and MOAB munitions?  

So even if we were sure that war would bring democracy to Iraq, the
costs would be too high. But of course, we are not at all sure. While
one doesn't know what the future will bring, whether the U.S. will
install some sort of democratic facade or keep General Tommy Franks as
the local proconsul, one thing is clear: there won't be real democracy
for the people of Iraq.



Stephen R. Shalom teaches political science at William Patterson
University in New Jersey. He is the author of numerous articles and
books, most recently Which Side Are You On? (Longman), a political
science text book. 

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