http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2003/03/
14/MN22108.DTL

Democracy in Iraq doubtful, State Dept. report says 
Social, economic obstacles work against transformation 

Greg Miller, Los Angeles Times   Friday, March 14, 2003   

--------------------------------------------------------------------------
------
 

Washington -- A classified State Department report expresses deep
skepticism that installing a new regime in Iraq will foster the spread of
democracy in the Middle East, a claim President Bush has made in trying
to build support for a war, according to intelligence officials familiar
with the document. 

The report exposes significant divisions within the Bush administration
over the so-called democratic domino theory, one of the arguments that
underpins the case for invading Iraq. 

The report, which has been distributed to a small group of top government
officials but not publicly disclosed, says that daunting economic and
social problems are likely to undermine basic stability in the region for
years, let alone prospects for democratic reform. 

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. 

"Liberal democracy would be difficult to achieve," says one passage of
the report, according to an intelligence official who agreed to read
portions of it to the Los Angeles Times. "Electoral democracy, were it to
emerge, could well be subject to exploitation by anti-American elements."


The thrust of the document, the source said, "is that this idea that
you're going to transform the Middle East and fundamentally alter its
trajectory is not credible." 

Even the document's title appears to dismiss the administration argument.
The report is labeled "Iraq, the Middle East and Change: No Dominoes." 

The report was produced by the State Department's Bureau of Intelligence
and Research, the in-house analytical arm. 

It is dated Feb. 26, officials said, the same day Bush endorsed the
domino theory in a speech to the conservative American Enterprise
Institute in Washington. 

"A new regime in Iraq would serve as a dramatic and inspiring example of
freedom for other nations in the region," Bush said. 

Other top administration officials, including Vice President Dick Cheney,
have made similar remarks in recent months. 

But the argument has been pushed hardest by a group of officials and
advisers who have been the leading proponents of going to war with Iraq.
Prominent among them are Paul Wolfowitz, the deputy defense secretary,
and Richard Perle, chairman of the Defense Policy Board, an influential
Pentagon advisory panel. 

Wolfowitz has said that Iraq could be the first Arab democracy and that
even modest democratic progress in Iraq would "cast a very large shadow,
starting with Syria and Iran but across the whole Arab world." 

Similarly, Perle has said that a reformed Iraq "has the potential to
transform the thinking of people around the world about the potential for
democracy, even in Arab countries where people have been disparaging of
their potential." 

White House officials hold out the promise of a friendly and functional
government in Baghdad to contrast with administration portrayals of
President Saddam Hussein's regime as brutal and bent on building his
stock of biological and chemical weapons. 

The domino theory also is used by the administration as a counterargument
to critics in Congress and elsewhere who have expressed concern that
invading Iraq will inflame the Muslim world and fuel terrorist activity
against the United States. 

But the theory is disputed by many experts and is viewed with skepticism
by analysts at the CIA and the State Department, intelligence officials
said. 

Critics say even establishing a democratic government in Iraq will be
extremely difficult. Iraq is made up of ethnic groups deeply hostile to
one another. Ever since its inception in 1932, the country has known
little but bloody coups and brutal dictators. 

Even so, it is seen by some as holding more democratic potential --
because of its wealth and educated population -- than many of its
neighbors. 

By some estimates, 65 million adults in the Mideast can't read or write,
and 14 million are unemployed, with an exploding, poorly educated youth
population. 

Given such trends, "We'll be lucky to have strong central governments (in
the Middle East), let alone democracy," said one intelligence official. 

The official stressed that no one in intelligence or diplomatic circles
opposes the idea of trying to install a democratic government in Iraq. 

"It couldn't hurt," the official said. "But to sell (the war) on the
basis that this is going to cause 1,000 flowers to bloom is naive." 

The obstacles to reform outlined in the report are daunting. 

"Middle East societies are riven" by political, economic and social
problems that are likely to undermine stability "regardless of the nature
of any externally influenced or spontaneous, indigenous change," the
report said, according to the source. 

The report cites "high levels of corruption, serious infrastructure
degradation, overpopulation" and other forces causing widespread
disenfranchisement. 

The report concludes that "political changes conducive to broader and
enduring stability throughout the region will be difficult to achieve for
a very long time." 

Middle East experts said there are other factors working against
democratic reform, including a culture that values community and to some
extent conformity over individual rights. 

Bush has responded to such assessments by assailing the "soft bigotry of
low expectations." 

 

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to