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Neo-Wilsonianism
in the Middle East: Democracy-Lite
John Stuart
Blackton
Is America serious
about political reform and democracy in the Arab world?
Does the neo-Wilsonian dimension of Bush administration
policy in the Middle East presage a decisive departure
from the longstanding realist policy of “regime
maintenance”?
A definitive answer
to this question is probably several years off. The
administration’s recent focus on “regime improvement” as
an alternative to regime maintenance remains a work in
progress.
It is possible,
however, to illuminate some aspects of this question by
considering why the
U.S. has chosen
judicial reform and the rule of law as prominent themes
in the State Department’s new Middle East Partnership
Initiative (MEPI), a several-hundred-million dollar
program to promote Arab political reform managed by the
Vice President’s daughter, Elizabeth Cheney.
In September 2003, MEPI sponsored a
major forum in
Bahrain that brought
together more than 200 representatives of Arab
ministries of justice under the rubric of “Judicial
Systems in the 21st Century.” U.S. Supreme
Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor spoke, and
participants discussed various judicial reform themes
including judicial ethics, recruitment procedures for
judges, court administration, and, somewhat more
daringly, the role of the judiciary in human rights.
MEPI is already funding several pilot judicial reform
programs across the region.
A
case can be made that promoting the rule of law,
narrowly construed, permits the Bush Administration to
perpetuate the ambiguity between the Wilsonian and
realist approaches, because rule of law reads one way to
Western audiences and quite another way to Arab leaders
of authoritarian and semi-authoritarian regimes.
For most Americans
and Europeans, heirs to the
legal traditions of Montesquieu, Locke and their views
of liberal governance, judicial reform and the
rule of law would seem ideal entry points for a liberal
reconsideration of the nature of the state in Arab
society.
In the Ottoman and
modern Arab traditions, however, the rule of law is a
more ambiguous proposition. Indeed, “rule of law” does
not have a linguistic counterpart in modern Arabic.
The “sovereignty of law” (siyadat al-qanun) is
the closest Arab legal construct, conveying a very
different balance between the individual and the state
in Arab society.
Law, the courts and
the judiciary are essential elements of legitimacy for
all governments. In the modern Arab world, where the
legitimacy of most governments is not rooted in the
consent of the governed, law and the judiciary are
especially critical to secure regime legitimacy.
Promoting the rule of
law, therefore, can provide a rubric that is comfortable
for both sides. American and European officials
understand the effort as a way to encourage human rights
and an evolutionary approach towards more liberal
institutions of governance. Middle Eastern regimes see
it as a way to make their courts more efficient, and
thus as an investment in the supporting infrastructure
of their legitimacy.
An ambitious and
broad-based set of initiatives in judicial reform could
serve both ends. However, the past decade of American
efforts in the region, along with the early MEPI
programs, have not yet demonstrated remarkable ambition
and breadth.
To date, the U.S. has
operated largely in “safe areas” of rule of law
programming in the Middle East, investing scores of
millions of dollars in improving court administration,
automating case records, training judges in commercial
law themes and drafting modernized commercial codes in
Egypt, the Palestinian Authority, Jordan and Morocco.
The largest
investment has been in the areas of court administration
and automated case management, making courts more
competent, efficient and accountable. Pilot programs in
Egypt and the
West Bank have
succeeded in increasing efficiency by measurably
reducing delays in resolving civil court cases. These
modest gains in court efficiency can be likened to
railroad reforms in fascist Italy that improved on-time
performance in the 1930s: citizens in these pilot
program areas have no doubt benefited from more timely
court judgments, but the quality of justice is
unaffected. The elusive goal of more liberal governance
remains essentially a chimera.
Tom
Carothers of the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace has identified three broad areas of judicial
reform available to the neo-Wilsonian promoters of
change:
·
Type
one reforms
concentrate on the
laws themselves: revising existing code and law or
writing entirely new laws;
·
Type
two reforms
focus on
strengthening law-related institutions, usually to make
them more competent, efficient, and accountable. For
example, training and salary increases for judges and
court staff, court automation and improved dissemination
of judicial decisions; and
·
Type
three reforms address the wider goal of increasing
government’s compliance with law. Carothers notes that
type three reforms depend less on technical or
institutional measures than on enlightened leadership
and sweeping changes in the values and attitudes of
those in power.
Both the USAID democracy programs in the Middle East and
the more recent State Department MEPI programs have, so
far, largely confined themselves to the relatively safe
ground of type one and type two judicial reforms.
America has financed the writing of new commercial codes
and invested in court automation and court management.
We have not ventured very far into the more problematic
territory of seriously engaging Middle Eastern regimes
on questions of regime compliance with the law.
Can the United States credibly venture into type three
reform work in the Arab World? A common local reaction
to MEPI in the region maintains that MEPI is
illegitimate because broader American foreign policy in
the region is illegitimate. At the close of the MEPI-sponsored
Arab Judicial Forum, for example, an Islamist member of
the Bahraini parliament challenged America’s credentials
to promote judicial reform on these grounds.
Mohammed
Khalid, who boycotted the Forum, said he “couldn’t
comprehend the participation of the U.S. in a forum that
calls for developing a fair justice system. The U.S.
has no right telling other countries to apply a just
legal system while itself does the contrary in Iraq and
Palestine.”
Perhaps more
fundamental, however, is the question of whether rule of
law and judicial reform efforts, even when they are of
this broader type, are constructive and promising entry
points to encourage the evolution of more liberal
institutions of governance in the region.
The global evidence
is mixed at best. Rule of law, in the Montesquieu and
Locke conception, seems to proceed from a more liberal
conception of the state and its relationship to society
rather than to precede it.
Until American policy
objectives for the region become less ambivalent about
the choice between regime maintenance and the long-term
value of more open political institutions, it is
unlikely that the neo-Wilsonians can aspire to anything
grander than democracy-lite.
John Stuart Blackton
is a retired Foreign Service Officer who served as
director of U.S.AID Pakistan and director of U.S.AID
Afghanistan. After leaving government service he
directed a multi-year program of administrative and
court modernization for the Egyptian Ministry of
Justice, and he is currently a consultant on judicial
reform issues in Afghanistan, Iraq and the Philippines.
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