United
States Has A Choice In Tunisia: Nothing To Do With The
U.S. - Exported Democracy
26 January 2011
By Nicola Nasser
The ongoing Tunisian Intifada (uprising) cannot yet
quite be termed a revolution; Tunisians are still
revolting, aspiring for bread and freedom. This
Intifada will go in history as a revolution if it gets
either bread or freedom and as a great revolution if
it gets both. Internally, "the one constant in
revolutions is the primordial role played by the
army," Jean Tulard, a French historian of revolutions,
told Le Monde in an interview, and the
Tunisian military seems so far forthcoming.
Externally, the United States stands to be a critical
contributor to either outcome in Tunisia, both because
of its historical close relations with the Tunisian
military and because of its regional hegemony and
international standing as a world power, but the U.S.
seems so far shortcoming.
While the Tunisian military has made a decision to
side with its people, the United States has yet to
decide what and whom to support among the revolting
masses led by influential components like communists,
Pan-Arabists, Islamists, left wingers, nationalists
and trade unionists. The natural social allies of U.S.
capitalist globalization, privatization and free
market have been sidelined politically as partners and
pillars of the deposed pro – U.S. Zein al-Abideen Ben
Ali's regime. The remaining pro – U.S. liberalism
among Tunisians are overwhelmed by the vast majority
of the unemployed, marginalized or underpaid who yearn
for jobs, bread, balanced distribution of the national
wealth and development projects more than they are
interested in upper class western - oriented
liberalism. Taken by surprise by
the evolving political
drama in
Tunisia, the U.S. cannot by default contribute to a
revolution for bread at a time its economic system is
unable to provide for Americans themselves.
However, it can play a
detrimental role in contributing to a real Tunisian
revolution for freedom by making an historic U-turn in
its foreign policy.
In June 2005, the then-Secretary of State Condoleezza
Rice told an Arab audience at the American University
in Cairo that, "For 60 years, my country, the United
States, pursued stability at the expense of democracy
in this region — and we achieved neither." But Rice
did not elaborate to add that this same policy was and
is still the main source of instability and the main
reason for the absent democracy. Her successor
incumbent Hillary Clinton has on January 13 in Qatar
postured as the Barak Obama Administration's
mouthpiece on Arab human rights to lecture Arab
governments on the urgent need for democratic reforms,
warning that otherwise they will see their countries
"sinking into the sand." But Clinton missed to point
out that her administration is still in pursuit of its
predecessor's advocacy of democracy through changing
regimes in Arab and Muslim nations by means of
military intervention, invasion and occupation, an
endeavor that has proved a failure in Afghanistan,
Iraq and the Israeli – occupied Palestinian
territories, as well a policy that was and is still
another source of regional instability and absence of
democracy.
The Tunisian Intifada has proved that democracy and
regime change can be homemade, without any U.S.
intervention. Ironically any such U.S. intervention
now is viewed in the region as a threat of a
counterrevolution that would preempt turning the
Intifada into a revolution. U.S. hands-off policy
could be the only way to democracy in Tunisia. But a
hands-off policy is absolutely not a trade mark of
U.S. regional foreign policy. However, the United
States has a choice now in Tunisia, but it is a choice
that pre-requisites a U – turn both in the U.S.
approach to Arab democracy and in its traditional
foreign policy.
The U.S. risks to loose strategically in Tunisia
unless it decides on an historic U – turn, because
politically the Tunisian Intifada targeted a U.S. –
supported regime and economically targeted a failed
U.S. model of development.
On
November 13, 2007, Georgetown University Human Rights
Institute and Law Center hosted a conference to answer
the question, "Tunisia: A Model of Middle East
Stability or an Incubator of Extremism?" But Tunisia
now has given the answer: Tunisia is neither; it is an
indigenous Arab way to democracy and moderation.
Indeed the U.S. has now a choice in Tunisia. The Arab
country which is leading the first Arab revolution for
democracy is now a U.S. test case. Non – U.S.
intervention would establish a model for other Arabs
to follow; it would also establish a model U.S. policy
that would over time make Arabs believe in any future
U.S. rhetoric on democracy and forget all the tragic
consequences of American interventions in the name of
democracy. But this sounds more a wishful thinking
than a realpolitik expectation.
A U.S. long standing traditional policy seems to weigh
heavily on its decision makers, who are obsessed with
their own creation of the "Islamist threat" as their
justification for their international war on terror,
which dictates their foreign policy, especially vis –
a vis Arab and Muslim states, to dictate a fait
accompli to their rulers to choose between either
being recruited to this war or being condemned
themselves as terrorists or terrorism sponsors, and in
this process exclusion policies should be pursued
against wide spread representative Islamic movements.
The U.S. perspective has always been that Arab
Democracy could be sacrificed to serve U.S. vital
interests and Arab democracy can wait! But the
Tunisian Intifada has proved that Arab democracy
cannot wait anymore.
Exclusion of popular Islamic movements while at the
same excluding democratic reforms until the war on
terror is won has proved a looser U.S. policy. The
U.S. exploitation of the "Islamist threat" now is not
convincing for Arab aspirants for democracy, who still
remember that during the Cold War with the former
Soviet Union the U.S. exploited the "communist
threat," then "Pan-Arabism threat," to shore up
autocratic and authoritarian Arab regimes. In Tunisia,
the prisons of the pro – U.S. regime were always full
long before there was an Islamic political movement:
"In the 1950s prisons were filled with Youssefites
(loyal to Salah Ben Youssef, who broke away from
Bourguiba's ruling Constitutional Party); in the 60s
it was the Leftists; in the 70s it was the trade
unions; and in the 80s it was our turn," leader
in-exile of the outlawed Islamic Nahda movement,
Rachid Ghannouchi, told the Financial Times on January
18.
"When Nahda was in Tunisia … there was no al-Qaeda,"
Ghannouchi said, reminding one that in the neighboring
Algeria there was no al-Qaeda too before The Islamic
Salvation Front (FIS) was outlawed. In the Israeli –
occupied territories, outlawing and imposing siege on
the Islamic Resistance Movement "Hamas," which won a
landslide electoral victory in 2006, should be a
warning that the only alternative to such moderate
Islamic movements is for sure the extremist al-Qaeda
like undergrounds. Jordan proved wiser than the U.S.
decision makers by allowing the Islamic Action Front
to compete politics lawfully. Recruiting fake Islamic
parties to serve U.S. policies as the case is in Iraq
has not proved feasible impunity against al-Qaeda. The
United States has to reconsider. Exclusion of
independent, moderate and non - violent Islamic
representative movements, unless they succumb to U.S.
dictates, has proved U.S. policy a failure. U.S.
parameters for underground violent unrepresentative
Islamists should not apply to these movements.
The U.S. decision makers however still seem deaf to
what Ghannouchi told the Financial Times: "Democracy
should not exclude communists … it is not ethical for
us to call on a secular government to accept us, while
once we get to power we will eradicate them." This is
the voice of Arab homemade democracy; it has nothing
to do with the U.S. - exported democracy.
* Nicola Nasser is a veteran Arab journalist based in
Bir Zeit, West Bank of the Israeli-occupied
Palestinian territories.