| DOCUMENT TOOLS |
Printer Friendly |
Add To Clipboard |
| FP COMPANY SNAPSHOTS |
| • Vision Incorporated |
| IMAGES |
| Tim Sloan, AFP, Getty Images |
|
U.S. President George W. Bush giving his second inaugural address in 2005. (FPinfomart: Restricted, Canada.com: Allowed) |
| About Images |
The Freedom Doctrine, Rip; Since 9/11, conservatives imagined that the spread of liberty would cure the world's ills. We were wrong
National Post
Tuesday, January 22, 2008
Page: A14
Section: Editorials
Byline: Jonathan Kay
Column: Jonathan Kay
Source: National Post
Three years ago this week, George W. Bush
delivered his second inaugural address -- a speech containing the
purest distillation of his world view ever set to words. "For as
long as whole regions of the world simmer in resentment and tyranny
-- prone to ideologies that feed hatred and excuse murder --
violence will gather," the U.S. President declared. "There is only
one force of history that can break the reign of hatred and
resentment, and expose the pretensions of tyrants, and reward the
hopes of the decent and tolerant, and that is the force of human
freedom … The survival of liberty in our land increasingly depends
on the success of liberty in other lands … America's vital interests
and our deepest beliefs are now one."
What Bush set out on Jan. 20, 2005 was not the fabled "Bush
doctrine," which pledged that America would take the military
initiative against terrorist groups and the regimes that sponsor
them. But it was just as important: The President's faith in liberty
as the be-all and end-all of human aspiration convinced him that it
didn't really matter what the world thought about the United States
throwing around its weight -- because when the time came, Americans
would be welcomed by oppressed Muslims yearning to breathe free.
Even God would smile on the enterprise: "The desire for liberty is
universal," the President later declared, "because it is written by
our Creator into the hearts of every man, woman and child on the
Earth."
Bush's soaring, ennobling vision of human emancipation -- his
"Freedom Doctrine," let us call it -- was extraordinarily effective
at rallying Americans to war following 9/11. Out of the ashes of the
World Trade Center would spring a born-again nation, one committed
to no less an "ultimate goal" than "ending tyranny in our world."
It was an intoxicating vision, and I know plenty of conservative
pundits who remain drunk on it still. But the truth is that the
Freedom Doctrine has been falsified many times over. Afghanistan
remains a broken country, with parts of it still under Taliban
control. Notwithstanding the hard work being done by NATO soldiers,
it turns out that few ordinary Afghan villagers care about democracy
-- which is a foreign concept they know little about, and has no
basis in the region's tribal culture.
In Iraq, likewise, it turns out that the freedom yearned for most
keenly was the freedom to butcher one's neighbour. Meanwhile, in
Gaza, the West Bank, the smaller Gulf states, Egypt and Lebanon,
many Arabs have used whatever nominal voting power they've been
granted to mark the ballot for hard-core Islamists who have the
Koran, not any Western concept of "liberty," written into their
hearts.
And then there's Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, where the United
States is backing useful dictators, and which have stood as
monuments to the hypocrisy and other-worldliness of the Freedom
Doctrine from the beginning.
Why did the Freedom Doctrine fail? The best explanation I've seen
appeared in a recently published essay by American scholar Daniel J.
Mahoney.
In Conservatism, Democracy, and Foreign Policy, the Assumption
College professor begins by distinguishing post-9/11
"neo-conservatism" from its Cold War variant. Unlike Bush's neo-neo
variant, Mahoney argues, the original neocons of the Soviet era "had
been more anti-totalitarian than 'democratic' in orientation, and
[were] perfectly willing to acknowledge the sheer intractability of
cultures and civilizations."
That is to say, old-school neo-conservatives did not insist on
Western democracy as a model for everyone. Like the U.S. military
commanders who've recently begun to work with Sunni tribes in Iraq's
An-bar province, they realized that the best way to detoxify
societies was sometimes to work through their traditional power
structures -- structures that Westerners find medieval, misogynistic
and repressive, but which are accepted as legitimate by the people
who count.
The neo-neo-cons, by contrast, are essentially utopians whose
obsession with the single template of democratic liberalism
exemplifies what Francis Fukuyama called "the end of history," and
what Marxist philosopher Alexandre Kojeve called "the universal and
homogenous state." In this sense, neo-neoconservatism isn't really
conservative at all, but in fact has much in common with the
grandiose -isms of the early 20th century.
In Iraq and Afghanistan, the result of America's "democratic
monomania" (Mahoney's term) has been a fixation on writing
constitutions, organizing elections and propping up flimsy
presidents. Washington's hope was that these trappings would serve
to transform the underlying societies by bringing out the citizens'
innate, long-suppressed love of freedom. But elections accomplish
little when they are grafted on to societies that lack the basic
building blocks of democracy -- due process, pluralism, the rule of
law and separation of church and state.
Mahoney does not denounce Bush as stupid or corrupt, as many
critics do. Rather, he presents the U.S. President as a well-meaning
moralist who became captured by a simplistic vision of the human
soul. On the President's teleprompter, the desire for liberty is
everything. In real life, it competes with many other darker
impulses -- from tribalism to religious fervour to the prosecution
of historical grievances.
A love of liberty is a wonderful thing in a politician. But in
Bush's case, one wishes he'd leavened it with humility. The same
critique applies to those pundits, such as me, who were once so
enraptured by his vision.
jkay@nationalpost.com
Illustration:
• Black & White
Photo: Tim Sloan, AFP, Getty Images / U.S. President George W. Bush
giving his second inaugural address in 2005.
Idnumber: 200801220119
Edition:
National
Story Type: Column
Length: 888 words
Keywords:
FOREIGN RELATIONS
Illustration Type: P
PRODUCTION FIELDS
NDATE:
20080122
NUPDATE: 20080122
DOB: 20080122
POSITION: 1

Printer Friendly
Add To Clipboard