07 August 2010 By Tariq Alhomayed It is extremely strange, for while the US President
confirms his country's determination to withdraw its
troops from Iraq by the end of the month, the Iraqi
Prime Minister is continuing to cling to power despite
his recent electoral defeat, and Iran is defending him
by saying: accept al-Maliki or else we'll hit you over
the head! We say that this is strange because an observer can
do nothing but ask: in this case, what is the
difference between Nouri al-Maliki and Saddam Hussein?
Al-Maliki is saying that Allawi won the elections by
only one vote, and that he does not consider this to
be an election defeat, while Saddam used to say that
the Iraqis had elected him with 100 percent of the
vote; therefore what is the difference between them?
The most important question that must be asked here
is, in this case, why did the US forces even topple
Saddam Hussein, if they are going to allow another
Saddam Nouri al-Maliki to rise up and appear to us
and the people of Iraq, but this time with democratic
cover? Washington justified its invasion of Iraq by saying
that it was searching for weapons of mass destruction
which it did not find although the most dangerous
weapons were those figures that were governing Iraq
under the leadership of Saddam Hussein. The Americans
later said that toppling Saddam Hussein would result
in a democratic spring emerging not just in Iraq, but
the regional as a whole; however what is happening
today is the opposite of this. The suffering of the
Iraqis is on the increase, and the danger that is
hanging over Iraq and the region is a warning that
the gates of hell are opening. For all the American talk about the democratization
of Iraq, and the necessity of the Iraqi people
managing their own national issues, this is nothing
more than beautiful talk that is a good excuse for the
ugly reality, for what is the difference between
Saddam and al-Maliki? What is the situation in Iraq
today in comparison with yesterday? What is the extent
of the potential risk from Iraq, and within it,
following the US withdrawal, in comparison to the risk
Iraq represented during the Saddam era? We ask this
not out of a desire for the occupiers to remain, but
from the door that it is up to those who corrupted and
destroyed Baghdad to fix this. It is the Americans who
corrupted Baghdad, and it has become clear that all of
their plans prior to the invasion of Iraq focused
on how to topple the Saddam Hussein regime, without
putting in place any clear plans for what would happen
afterwards. Therefore Iraq's democracy is like somebody who has
kidnapped a child from its family, and then abandoned
this child in a tough neighborhood, telling him [the
child] to look after himself in order to learn the
secrets of life and survival. Democracy is like a
seedling that is watered by hard work, perseverance,
patience, and occasionally blood; however the
cultivation [of democracy] must always be accompanied
by a parallel effort to construct [the country]. This
is what Iraq is lacking, as democracy was imposed upon
the country in a completely superficial manner. To sum up what the Americans did in the country,
they entered Iraq which was suffering from old age
during the Saddam Hussein regime, and subjected it to
an extremely difficult surgical operation, and then
they asked Iraq on the day after the operation to get
up and run a thousand meter relay-race in a region
full of wolves! Post-Saddam Iraq was not in need of superficial
democracy, but rather it was and continues to be
in need of a strong ruler, from the army, in the ilk
of a benevolent autocrat or an Iraqi Ataturk. Such a
ruler would prepare the country for the post-Saddam
era, ensuring institution building, and guaranteeing
that Iraq does not fall into the hands of greedy
powers, whilst also protecting the country from
sectarianism and in-fighting, and ensuring that Iraq
reaches a stage where it a country made up of genuine
democratic institutes, rather than a country of
sectarian rulers who cannot see farther than the ends
of their own noses. This is something that is
confirmed every day by the events in Iraq.
Tariq Alhomayed is the Editor-in-Chief of Asharq Al-Awsat, the youngest
person to be appointed that position. He holds a BA degree in Media studies from
King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, and has also completed his Introductory
courses towards a Masters degree from George Washington University in
Washington D.C. He is based in London. Comments 💬 التعليقات |