|
No Instant Democracy
Nikolas Gvosdev
By now, the long hard slog that is Iraq should have
convinced all but the most die-hard believers that there
is no presto, quick change formula that transforms an
entrenched autocracy into a liberal democracy overnight.
Thus, it is even more surprising that a number of the
elements that failed in Iraq are being touted as viable
options in promoting democracy across the Eurasian
steppes.
For those not satisfied with the pace of evolutionary,
incremental change in some states – or frustrated by the
lack of movement in others – the temptation of using
wealthy exiles and opposition forces to displace
existing regimes in Central Asia, in the Caucasus and
perhaps even Russia itself is too great to resist. After
all, what emerges can't possibly be worse than the
status quo, right?
This leads to the first lesson from
Iraq:
if you pursue regime change, know beforehand what you
intend to replace the ancien regime with.
"Creative destruction" is not a feasible strategy. One
cannot topple a regime and then assume that after a
period of anarchy and a struggle for power among
different factions or regional groupings a more liberal
and pluralistic government will come to power.
Whole-scale de-Baathification in Iraq, for example, has
proven to be a mistake, as former Russian Prime Minister
Yevgeny Primakov argues in the forthcoming issue of
The National Interest, because most of Iraq's
professional classes had been nominal party members.
Rather than decapitating the old regime and absorbing
its healthy or useful segments into the new order, the
Coalition initially tried to uproot the entire organism,
and vastly overestimated the capacity of opposition
movements to supply trained personnel and capable
leaders as substitutes.
The successful transitions after Manuel Noriega in
Panama, Ferdinand Marcos in the Philippines, Vladimir
Meciar in Slovakia or Slobodan Milosevic in Serbia all
happened because there was an organized opposition in
place that commanded popular support and was capable of
taking power legitimately, with a minimum of disruption.
Significantly, in each of the success stories, the new
leadership was able to exercise control over the organs
of the previous regime: the military, the ministries,
and so on
But the "raw material" for a viable alternative exists,
some argue, in the persons of influential exiles such as
former political leaders or business tycoons and in the
foot soldiers of opposition movements within Eurasian
states.
This leads to the second lesson from
Iraq:
be wary of exiles, and question the motives of those
seeking to come to power. The debacle with Ahmad Chalabi
and the Iraqi National Congress illustrates all too
plainly a principle outlined by Christopher Marsh and
Mark Heppner in a recent issue of Nationalities
Papers: weak actors such as the INC are all to happy
to use strong states such as the United States to
achieve their ends, and they are more than prepared to
say whatever it takes to secure support. So the Kosovo
Albanian leadership eagerly pledged their commitment to
uphold "multi-ethnicity", "tolerance" and "pluralism" in
the province in order to gain NATO intervention even
when, on the ground, they had no interest in preserving
a Serbian presence anywhere in Kosovo.
We should be suspicious of any "road-to-Damascus"
conversions on the part of political or business leaders
who, while in power, had no problem at all with the
status quo but whose commitment to democracy,
transparency and openness only became apparent after
being on the losing side. And we should be prepared to
question the motives of any opposition movement: are
they really interested in changing the system, or simply
displacing the current ruling clan, elite or group so
that they can install themselves and their clients in
their place?
Simply being an opponent to an existing regime or
dictatorial ruler should not be enough. This lesson
should have been apparent after the fall of the Soviet
Union itself, when it turned out that simply because
someone had been a dissident against the communist
system did not mean that person was a supporter of
liberal democracy.
Eurasia is a region that is simply too critical to
global security to be cavalier in proposing "regime
changes." Existing regimes may be brutal, dictatorial,
authoritarian and inefficient--but risking chaos by
trying to destabilize the status quo is foolhardy.
We have been spoiled by Georgia's "Rose Revolution." On
the surface, it seemed so easy: a series of street
protests bringing down a corrupt old regime and
installing a new government promising reform. But the
reality is that this change was years in the making.
Even more significantly, Mikheil Saakashvili, the
current president, started his career as a protégé of
Eduard Shevardnadze, elected to the Georgian Parliament
in 1995 and serving as Minister of Justice in 2000-01.
Even after declaring his opposition to Shevardnadze,
Saakashvili was elected as the chair of the Tbilisi city
assembly in 2002 and was able to construct a base for
the opposition from within the city government. In
essence, the old regime had born and nurtured the
children who have replaced it.
So the lesson from Georgia is not that a series of
euphoric street protests "brought democracy" to this
South Caucasian country, but that an alliance between
the disaffected masses and members of the governing
elite created sufficient momentum to displace the old
guard. In other words, change came from within as much
as it was forced from without. The street protest which
captured the attention of the world in November 2003 was
just the tip of the iceberg.
However, many seemed to have learned the wrong lesson.
Captivated by the spectacle of the "Rose Revolution",
they have concluded that such revolutions can easily be
exported elsewhere, but without the need to lay the
foundation that existed in Georgia. Mobilizing "people
power" without leadership cadres able to take the reins
of government is a recipe for disaster.
It is easy to forget that 30 years ago, East Asian
states like South Korea and Taiwan were the "Central
Asian stans" of their day, equally denounced for their
repressive and authoritarian governments. The vibrancy
and strength of Asian democracy today is proof, however,
that a strategy of long-term engagement, rather than the
search for a short-term fix, is what is needed for
Eurasia. And the problems we have encountered in Iraq
should only confirm that analysis.
Nikolas K. Gvosdev is
editor of In the National Interest. This piece appeared
originally in UPI's "Outside View" and is used with
permission.
|