June 1, 2005
I Cogitator Features Pat Buchanan -- Yes, You Read That Correctly!
Most
of you imagine it would have to be a sweat-soaked day in Antarctica
before I Cogitator would feature the blusterings of Pat Buchanan.
Well, check the temperature because Monsignor
Patrick has delivered a column featuring subject matter that has been
bandied about for some time on the left side of the political spectrum.
He could have titled this: 'Be Careful What You Ask For.'
Here is an excerpt. For the entire article, go here.
May 25, 2005
Bringing the Arab Street to Power
by Patrick J. Buchanan
Creators Syndicate Inc.
With no weapons of mass destruction
found and nothing to tie Saddam to Sept. 11, the White House has
justified the war as America's way to democratize Iraq and, through it,
the Arab world.
Exhibit A in the White House case
is the January elections. Kurds and Shi'ites courageously voted for an
assembly to write a new constitution. Dispossessed Sunnis, under death
threats, stayed away. Result: the first Shia-dominated regime elected
in an Arab country in history, though another is right next door in
Iran.
Last week, Iranian Foreign Minister
Kamal Kharrazi arrived in Baghdad. Unlike Condi Rice, Kharrazi had no
need for a flak jacket or helmet and was received in Najaf by Ayatollah
Sistani, who has yet to meet an American representative.
In his 2002 State of the Union,
Bush had described Iran, Iraq, and North Korea as an "axis of evil," a
triumvirate of the world's worst dictatorships, all hell-bent on
acquiring the world's worst weapons – to menace mankind.
But, in 2002, there was no
Baghdad-Tehran axis, only mutual hatred between them from an eight-year
war in which a million may have died on each side. But today, a
Baghdad-Tehran axis is emerging. On Kharrazi's visit, Iraq admitted to
having started the 1980s war, laying full blame on Saddam. Both nations
condemned terror. Both recognized their mutual sovereignty and created
a joint committee to thicken economic, political, and security ties.
Among issues raised was surely how
Iraq will react if the United States attacks Iran when its negotiations
with the EU over its nuclear program collapse, as appears imminent.
Query: How much blood and treasure
should Uncle Sam invest in a war to bring about free elections, if the
result is to replace autocrats with Islamists who favor looser ties to
America and closer ties to fellow Islamists? Have we spent the lives of
1,600 American soldiers and $200 billion to create a Shia axis that
will dominate the Persian Gulf when we depart, as we one day must?
Other elections are approaching, and the results are likely to be equally ambivalent for the United States.
In Lebanon, Hezbollah, which the
State Department considers a terrorist organization, stands to make
major gains in the parliamentary elections. Hamas, another group
branded terrorist by State, is expected, based on its showing in local
elections, to give Arafat's Fatah a strong run. The Palestinian
Authority is seeking to postpone the July 17 elections.
In Egypt, where President Mubarak
is under pressure from the White House to hold free and fair elections,
the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood, the oldest Islamist organization in
the Middle East, with deep roots among the pious poor, now wants in.
According to the Washington Post,
"The Muslim Brotherhood, the largest organized opposition force in
Egypt, has evolved into the country's most assertive campaigner for
democratic reforms by defying bans on its political activities and
spearheading a series of demonstrations against President Hosni
Mubarak."
The Brotherhood has stolen the
spotlight from the pro-Western secularists who had been challenging
Mubarak, but, adds the Post, "has paid a heavy price for its new vigor.
According to government figures, more than 750 activists have been
arrested since March 27. Brotherhood officials put the number at more
than 2,000."
Hezbollah, Hamas, the Muslim
Brotherhood, and other Islamist parties are succeeding due to common
factors. They all tend to be militantly anti-Israel and anti-American,
which resonates with the Muslim masses. They operate social programs
that assist the poor and have thus created grass-roots organizations –
not unlike the Democratic Party that aided poor Catholic immigrants in
the 19th century. They are seen as selfless, while the empowered
regimes are viewed as selfish and corrupt.
Free and fair elections in all 22
Arab countries would likely bring Islamists close to power, or into
power, in every single one...
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