After losing thousands of lives, suffering tens of thousands of
casualties, and spending hundreds of billions of dollars, we have
brought democracy to Iraq. Sort of. But we
certainly haven’t created the sort of liberal politics and
free society that Americans think of as characteristic of
democracy.
Observes my Cato Institute colleague Ted Galen Carpenter:
The Iraqi government of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki is
increasingly corrupt and autocratic. Aside from periodic elections
with competing parties, the new Iraq is beginning to resemble the
old Iraq under Saddam Hussein. Maliki’s bureaucrats routinely
harass both foreign and domestic media outlets that dare to expose
his administration’s abuses.
Disturbing evidence of such repression has been building for at
least the past two years, but matters escalated dramatically in
February with the regime’s shocking brutality. As with many other
countries in the Middle East, demonstrations broke out in Iraq
demanding, among other things, an end to the Maliki government’s
rampant corruption. Those demonstrations culminated with a “Day of
Rage.” Although the demonstrations even on that day were mostly
peaceful, security forces killed at least twenty-nine
participants.
The beatings administered to the protestors particularly echoed
prior times. Unfortunately, it seems unlikely that respect for
human rights is going to improve given the current
constellation of political forces.
Nor is Iraq proving to be a loyal ally. When it comes to
Washington’s friends, in this case the Sunni thieves in power in
Bahrain, who relied on Saudi troops to crack down on the majority
Shia population, Iraqis—people and officials—came down against
the U.S. supported regime. If the Shia-Sunni split further
widens things could get even uglier.
Not that this should surprise us. In Kosovo the U.S.
fought a war for people now accused of having engaged in
organ-trafficking, using prisoners, both Serbs and accused Kosovar
collaborators. Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) appeared prepared to
go to war with Russia over the country of Georgia, which actually
started that little war back in August 2008 and whose president,
Mikheil Saakashvilli, now appears to be a bit less of the
democratic paragon that the senator then seemed to
believe. (Of course, a couple years ago Sen. McCain
was off in Tripoli toasting Moammar Qaddafi on a mission to
discuss the provision of military aid. This was
before the senator decided that Qaddafi was a vile
dictator who needed to be removed.)
The next time someone urges a “humanitarian” war, they should
think of Iraq. Irreplaceable human losses as well as a
further boost along the road to national bankruptcy. Loosing
civil strife which killed a couple hundred thousand Iraqi
civilians. And no democracy any of us would want to live
under. Some deal.