Time to Come Ashore
Charles
Krauthammer
Let me start by reflecting on a few things that were
said earlier. (1) One was about bringing the evidence to
legitimize and justify the war. There is one thing that
I think everybody has overlooked--we are going to have
retroactive evidence. Even though I would like us to be
able to have a smoking gun, I don’t know how close we
are going to come to producing it when the President
decides that it is time
I also want to endorse what was said about the
positive effects of American success. I think the war in
Afghanistan is the template. The immediate effect of the
war on Afghanistan is that it was a stunning success--it
made everyone think twice about what America was and
what the United States could do. I think some of that
has dissipated over the last year as we have been fairly
uncertain what to do about Iraq, and that skepticism
about American resolve would certainly revive if we end
up doing nothing about Iraq. Let me say a few words
about the reasons why a campaign against Iraq has to be
done.
There are three rationales. The obvious one is the
weapons of mass destruction. You cannot allow Saddam to
acquire them. It would also serve as an example in the
future; if we were to exercise the political death
penalty on Saddam, this would have a deterrent effect on
others who are trying to acquire these weapons. In and
of itself, the weapons of mass destruction argument
would be enough to justify the war. That is essentially
what the administration has done--they have pinned the
entire case on a single argument. I understand why the
administration has done this, because that is the only
way we are going to convince allies.
There are two other reasons. The second is the issue
of American credibility. If for no other reason, having
said what the President has said--starting with his
"axis of evil" speech, the speech at West
Point and all the way through the year--he has
consistently said that this state of affairs will not
stand. If he doesn’t follow through, I think there
will be a tremendous collapse of everything we had
achieved by the war in Afghanistan. That would be a
great strategic setback. And it would have negative
effects on the region, especially on the war on
terrorism.
The third reason I think is the one that nobody wants
to say, because it will lead us to the discussion of
Arab democracy. September 11 changed our assumptions
about the world. It marked the end of the "end of
history." We really thought that at the end of the
Cold War we were done with existential struggle against
existential enemies. We had sixty years of it, and at
the end, we succeeded, they vanished. I remember when we
were writing in The National Interest during the
early 1990s, thinking about where the next enemy was
going to come from, the best candidate was China. That’s
what we came up with; there were not many people who
said it was going to be "Osama bin Laden" and
Islamic radicalism. After 9/11 we discovered that we
once again had an existential enemy and that it has been
harbored in the Arab world. I don't, however, believe it
to be "pan-Islamic." To be honest, it is Arab
extremism--both secular and Muslim. We see Saddam
adopting the language of the Islamic radicals but of
course he is a Ba’athist and a secularist. His
language might be fundamentalist but it is a form of
Arab extremism.
We need to understand also how this came about. After
the Second World War we decided to be
"Wilsonian" everywhere in the world. There was
no Asian exceptionalism, no European exceptionalism. In
Latin America we insisted on democracy. We were going to
try and democratize the whole world, to make it like
us--but we had two exceptions: Africa (because it was
strategically irrelevant and chaotic) and the Arab
world. Arab exceptionalism was the real serious example.
For sixty years, Franklin Roosevelt's bargain with Ibn
Saud was in place--you give us oil and we give you
protection and refrain from interfering with how you run
your internal affairs. The bargain ended on September
11. I think what happened is we realized we can no
longer accept Arab exceptionalism--meaning the
resistance to modernization and democratization. In the
long run, if the Arab world remains an isolated island,
harboring anti-Americanism, the deepest and the most
virulent in the world, as well as developing weapons of
mass destruction, it will be an intolerable threat.
This brings me to my third reason for the war in
Iraq, what I would call "coming ashore." Our
attitude to the Arab world has always been that we could
be the "offshore balancer" of last resort. We
would pacify the regime by buying off the corrupt
governments in Egypt and Saudi Arabia. We would police
and we would patrol offshore. This hands-off, offshore
policy, I think, is over. Iraq will be the first act in
the play of an America coming ashore in Arabia, trying
to do what it did in Germany and Japan. I know the
analogy is obviously a strained one but I think,
historically, this is what the mission is. It’s not
just about weapons of mass destruction or American
credibility. It’s about reforming the Arab world. I
think we don’t know the answer to the question of
whether the Arab-Islamic world is inherently allergic to
democracy. The assumption is that it is--but I don’t
know if anyone can answer that question today. We haven’t
attempted it so far. The attempt will begin with Iraq.
Afterwards, we are going to have empirical evidence;
history will tell us whether this assumption was correct
or not.
I remember when it was said that Asia was resistant
to democracy. It too had a "special culture"
and there was no way that we could impose Western
democracy. Yet, lo and behold, Taiwan, South Korea and
Hong Kong are examples of modernizing and democratizing
parts of Asia. The idea that Confucianism is somehow
hostile to democracy proved to be incorrect. We will now
learn whether Islam or Arab culture is also an
impediment to democracy. Iraq is an attempt to do this.
I think the goals obviously have to be modest early
on--changing the regime, changing the geopolitical
status of Iraq, and so on. I am skeptical as to whether
we can produce a functioning Western-style democracy
style in Iraq, but perhaps we could achieve something
close to it. The pre-civil war Lebanese model was
reasonable stable, reasonably democratic, accommodating
and tolerant. The Hashemite kingdom is not a bad
model--while it is not Western democracy, it is a
decent, fairly liberal way of life. (2) If we can
achieve something like either of these in Iraq it will
be a great success. It may also have a contagious
effect. I think this has to be done. We have to come
ashore in the Arab world, we have to make an attempt at
changing it--and it can only start in Iraq.
(1) See especially, "War on Iraq: Comments on
the Symposium", also contained in this issue.
- I would also add that Jordan has had to walk a
tightrope, balancing its instinctive pro-American
sentiments with the geographic reality of being
sandwiched Iraq and Syria. We can only imagine what
it might be like if there is an American-occupied
Iraq on one side, and how Jordan will be able to act
differently--openly supporting us.