By Andrew Cline on 2.2.05 @ 12:06AM
Iraq and America’s post-Civil War South have much in common.
Exposing left-wing hypocrisy on Iraq is as easy as uttering
three little words: "What about Reconstruction?"
Despite the obvious success of Sunday's election, the anti-war
left is sticking to its script, which says the election is
illegitimate because it was conducted under American "occupation"
and because the group most closely associated with the old ruling
class (the Sunnis) did not fully participate.
But precisely the same thing can be said about the American
South during Reconstruction. Yet as the left calls the Iraq
election a "sham" and a "farce," you would be hard pressed to find
a liberal anywhere who would use the same terms to describe the
election of America's first black legislators, congressmen,
senators and governors.
The Nation's John Nichols wrote of "this weekend's so-called 'election' in
Iraq" and complained that it "effectively denied the Iraqi people
an honest choice" because candidates did not offer a timetable for
American withdrawal. He went on to explain that the election was a
"farce" and a "charade" because it was "played out against a
backdrop of violence so unchecked that a substantial portion of the
electorate -- particularly Sunni Muslims -- avoided the polls for
reasons of personal safety," contained candidates who kept a low
profile for fear of violence, and was characterized by "stilted"
debate.
The left-wing complaint can be summed up by a Gaza City resident
interviewed by the Associated Press. "You can't have free and fair
elections under occupation. They simply don't mean anything," he
said.
Hiram Revels would disagree. In 1870, Revels became the first
black U.S. senator when the Mississippi legislature, full of
Republicans elected in the early period of Reconstruction, sent him
to fill the seat previously held by Jefferson Davis. In 1867,
Mississippi's government had been put under the control of Union
Gen. E.O.C. Ord, who appointed an interim government and oversaw
the election of delegates to a state constitutional convention. The
ratification of that constitution was prevented by a Democratic
Party boycott and the threat of widespread violence. But
Republicans regrouped, modified the constitution and held a new
election, which ushered in a new Republican government that sent
Revels to the Senate.
In the Reconstruction South, a war of liberation (in which
national security, not liberation, was originally the primary
justification) had resulted in the toppling of an oppressive power
structure and the quick installment into office of a previously
subjugated people with little or no governing experience.
In 1867 the federal government divided the South (except
Tennessee) into military districts and gave military governors the
authority to remove people already in office and disenfranchise
large chunks of the population. Many whites not barred from voting
expressed their displeasure with these events by refusing to
participate in elections.
With much of the old guard forcibly or voluntarily removed from
political participation, Republicans started winning elections, and
blacks gained their first real political power in the old
Confederacy. Though federal troops were gradually being removed
from the South, some remained or were sent back down to deter or
defend against terrorist attacks from "unreconstructed" whites.
In the South, as in Iraq, remnants of the former regime launched
a ruthless campaign of terror to try to regain power. Just a few
examples: In 1866, whites killed 46 blacks in three days of street
violence in Memphis and followed that up with the slaughter of 40
black and white Republicans in an attack on a black suffrage
convention in New Orleans. In 1872, two men claimed to be the
rightfully elected governor of Louisiana, and President Grant sent
troops to seat the Republican, which prompted more violence. The
following year a group called The White League massacred about 100
black Louisiana militiamen.
This repression was curbed by Union troops and the Department of
Justice. But only for a while. When Reconstruction collapsed
because the government lost the will to continue it, whites ushered
in the era of Jim Crow, which lasted for nearly a century. No
liberal would defend Jim Crow, yet many would gladly consign Iraqis
to an even worse fate under the mantra: Support our troops: Bring
them home now!
Reconstruction in the South and Reconstruction in Iraq are not
identical, of course. But the similarities are strong. Take this
quote from Yale historian David Blight, author of the widely
praised book Race and Reunion: The Civil War in American
Memory; substitute the word "Iraq" for the word
"Reconstruction," and the parallel is clear:
"There was no script for Reconstruction. If anything, winning
the war, by comparison, was easier than that agonizing,
statesmanlike political process of planning what to do about
Reconstruction. Reconstruction was a massive logistical, political,
Constitutional, economic challenge like the country had never
faced."
If the anti-war left wants to deny the legitimacy of Sunday's
election because Sunnis stayed home and American troops patrolled
the streets, fine. Then let them explain how Southern elections
under the same conditions were valid.
topics:
Constitution, Military, Iraq, NATO