Iraq’s stern rebuttal to a simplistic neocon vision
By Robert W. Merry
Safire ceased writing his column in 2005 and died of pancreatic cancer four years later. He isn’t here to defend himself against those who might seek to parse his well-recognized polemical brilliance in search of underlying flaws in reasoning. But that brilliance in itself, when applied to the matter of George W. Bush’s Iraq War, cries out for attention, given the course of Mideast events since that fateful 2003 invasion. Safire’s own zest for disputatious inquiry provides an added measure of justification.
The column in question, written on the Bush war’s first anniversary, was a paean to the salutary results of the invasion and what it was likely to unleash throughout the Middle East. We mourn our losses, he began, but noted in passing that they represented only 2 percent of our losses in Korea. Besides, tens of thousands of Iraqis were alive because Saddam Hussein had been removed from the scene.
He continued: “Nobody can be certain that Iraq will remain whole and free after we turn over sovereignty . But prospects look far better than predicted by the defeatists who claimed a year ago that political freedom had no chance of taking root in hostile Arab soil.”
Safire saw in Iraq the emergence of free electricity, more televisions and air conditioning, greater flows of oil, schools and businesses coming to life, declining unemployment, U.S.-funded development projects, and an American-built civilian defense corps to go after cantankerous Islamists. With the emergence of an interim government, he predicted, ongoing terrorist activity “will be a nationalizing, not a destabilizing, force — directed not at occupiers, but against the terrorist invaders.”
“Optimistic?” asked Safire, then answered no. “We have to believe in the popular success of a combination of democracy and prosperity” based on “the power of the human desire for freedom.”
Moreover, in the Safire vision, Iraq was just the beginning. From Kuwait to Qatar, he wrote, Saddam’s fate had been a “political tonic.” Libya’s Moammar Gadhafi was knuckling under from fear of being overthrown. Iran was “ripening for revolution.” Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak and Saudi Arabia’s royalty were nervous “because an arc of democracy bids fair to extend from Turkey through Iraq to Israel, with literate, enterprising populations blazing a path to liberating prosperity in the greater Middle East.”
Then he turned his attention to Syria’s “sullen” Bashar Assad, who also was “feeling the heat” — most notably from economic sanctions, supported by Congress, then being developed by Mr. Bush. This provided what Safire called a “unified American message — substantial largesse for free Iraq, contrasted with the start of serious sanctions for despotic Syria.”
He concluded: “Success of democracy in Iraq is the key to democratic reform throughout the greater Middle East . When creeping democracy gradually brings a better life to people of the region, the basis for hatred and terror will erode and the suicide bomber will pass from the scene.”
It is difficult to conceive of a more eloquent exposition of the Bush policy — or a more wrongheaded one. Those “defeatists” who questioned the likelihood of democracy sprouting in the Mideast soil have been proved far more prescient than the Safires of American discourse a dozen years ago.
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