التخلي
عن حلفائنا الديمقراطيين
بقلم:
دافيد شنكر
بوسطن
جلوب - 17/5/2007
ان تجربة الولايات المتحدة في
المنطقة تقول بأن الرجوع إلى
السياسة الأمريكية القديمة
ليست هي الخيار الصحيح, ان
السياسة الحالية لا تخدم
حلفائنا في المنطقة كما لا تخدم
المصالح الأمريكية.
Abandoning
our democratic allies
By
David Schenker | May 17, 2007
A
FEW WEEKS ago, President George W. Bush called Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak to congratulate him on the
wedding of his son and political heir apparent, Gamal.
Meanwhile, Mubarak's pro-democracy opposition was
protesting because it understood Gamal's nuptials as yet
another step in the 79-year-old president's plan to
transfer authority to his son. Adding insult to injury
-- based on the administration's most recent policy turn
on
Egypt
-- the opposition saw President Bush's phone call as
Washington
's tacit blessing for
Mubarak's undemocratic transition plan
Across
the
Middle East
,
Arab democrats are under siege by authoritarian
governments and are increasingly discouraged by the
apparent
US
move away from supporting
democracy. The administration's policy shift on
Egypt
is perhaps the best example of the departure from the
six-year focus on democracy promotion in favor of a more
pragmatic approach.
Once
the anchor of
Washington
's
Middle East
initiatives,
Egypt
has lost much of its luster. In 2002, the administration
threatened to withhold $130 million in assistance if
Egypt
did not release pro-democracy activist Saad Eddin
Ibrahim from prison. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
cancelled a 2005 visit to
Cairo
after Ayman Nour -- a rival
candidate to Mubarak -- was jailed prior to elections.
That
was then. Concerned about
Egypt
's
diminished status in Arab politics -- and by an apparent
increase in the threat posed to
Cairo
by Islamists --
Washington
is taking steps to rehabilitate the bilateral
relationship. The first step has been to shelve the
democracy agenda.
For
example, the administration only offered tepid criticism
of
Egypt
's
arrest and conviction this spring of an Egyptian student
blogger, and of the subsequent passage of new draconian
security amendments to the Egyptian constitution.
Morover, Francis Richardonne, the
US
ambassador to
Egypt
,
described Ayman Nour's fate "an Egyptian
issue," and seemingly legitimated Nour's arrest by
saying "this case is known in
Egypt
to have both political and criminal dimensions,
predominately criminal."
The
administration shift on
Egypt
is the most pronounced, but the policy has changed
dramatically throughout the
Middle East
and has had a pernicious
affect on regional democrats. In May, the administration
ended its policy of isolating the terrorist-supporting
authoritarian Asad regime of
Syria
,
which had been in place since the 2005 assassination of
former Lebanese prime minister Rafik Hariri, a crime for
which
Syria
is largely believed to have been responsible.
.At
a conference in
Egypt
,
Rice met with Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Mualem to
discuss
Iraq
.
The next day,
Syria
sentenced leading democracy advocate Anwar Bunni to five
years in prison. And this past week, Kamal Labwani, who
was imprisoned nearly two years ago for traveling to the
United States and meeting with senior administration
officials, was sentenced to 12 years.
Next
door in
Lebanon
,
the pro-West, pro-democracy, anti-Syrian government of
Prime Minister Fouad Siniora is understandably nervous.
The concern in
Beirut
is that the
United States
may let
Damascus
off the hook for the Hariri
killing in exchange for Syrian cooperation on
Iraq
.
Even though the administration continues to assure
Siniora that it will not make any deals sacrificing
Lebanese democrats, given
Washington
's recent track record of
not standing by its liberal Arab allies, there is
justifiably little faith.
Topping
it off, Deputy of State John Negroponte recently
traveled to
Libya
,
the highest-ranking
US
visit in decades. At one time the administration
considered
Libya
problematic in regard to its weapons of mass
destruction, support for terrorism, and authoritarian
system of government. But since
Libya
renounced its WMD in December 2003, the administration
has pursued a normalization of relations without regard
to governance.
Arab
liberals recognize that
Washington
is backing away from its democracy agenda and understand
the implications. While the administration cannot be
faulted for looking for new remedies to the ills of the
region, abandoning
Middle
East
democrats -- that small, persecuted minority of Arabs who
actually share US values -- is not a winning long-term
strategy. Not only are these courageous individuals
subject to government reprisals in the region, the
US
policy shift serves as confirmation that
Washington
is an unreliable ally. The
result, of course, is that Arab democrats will be less
likely to challenge their governments in the future.
While
the administration's policy of supporting democrats has
not been as successful as had been hoped,
US
experience in the
Middle East
suggests that a return to the old policy of relying on
autocrats is not the answer. A more pragmatic approach
may be warranted, but
Washington
need not abandon its
democratic allies in the process. The current policy
serves neither
US
allies nor US interests in
the region.
David
Schenker is a senior fellow at the Washington Institute
for Near East Policy. From 2002 to 2006, he was the
Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Palestinian affairs adviser
in the office of the secretary of defense.
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/oped/articles/2007/05/17/abandoning_our_democratic_allies/
-----------------
نشرنا
لهذه المقالات لا يعني أنها
تعبر عن وجهة نظر المركز كلياً
أو جزئياً
|