Democratic Fundamentalism
Part I:
Thoughts on Haiti, Cuba,
Iraq, and Kosovo
March 3, 2004
By Nikolas Gvosdev
"First, modernization. Then, democratization." Over
the past week, several different visitors to the offices
of The National Interest, in commenting on the
U.S. agenda for the "greater Middle East," have uttered
a version of that maxim. One of our guests shared his
unease at the "democratic fundamentalism" that he finds
has gripped a number of American policymakers: the
belief – and here I stress the faith-based aspect of
this proposition – that mandating the forms of political
democracy trumps the need for extensive effort to
construct long-term, stable, viable political and
economic institutions.
Let me state for the
record that I am no opponent of democracy. I do not subscribe to the
position that democracy is suitable as a form of government only for certain
nations or cultures. I agree that when a society is more open, more
transparent and more responsive to the needs of its citizenry, it tends to
be a more stable and predictable actor in international affairs. But I don't
sing the virtues of an unstable democracy.
Unstable democracies
are produced when a country lacks the basic economic situation needed to
sustain a vibrant civil society. Foreign NGO money can serve as seed
capital, but as Richard Slaughter noted in the summer 2002 issue of the
magazine, "social infrastructure investment must be paid for from general
economic gain." Even in "democratizing" countries, such as Russia, the
recent debates over media freedom have not been over the government imposing
formal censorship, but over who controls the media. So until
Russia
develops a flourishing small-and-medium business enterprise culture, where
media outlets can be self-financing due to advertising, the state of media
freedom will always remain vulnerable to the pressure that the state or
oligarchs can levy. And this situation has been replicated in many other
"newly-democratic" countries around the world.
Haiti
serves as a unwelcome reminder that democracies are not created on the backs
of "humanitarian interventions." There is a reason why nearly every report
on the island contains the phrase that "Haiti
is the poorest nation in the Western Hemisphere." Ten years ago, the United
States restored to power a "democratically-elected president" who was
expected to undertake fundamental reforms to transform his country; today we
escort that same president into exile. (One can also note the parallels with
Georgia, which is in terms of the former Soviet space one of the region's
poorest countries, and the experience of Eduard Shevardnadze, hailed ten
years ago as a great reformer and now ignobly remembered as a failed
president.)
And Haiti had a
number of key advantages that most parts of the "greater Middle East" do
not. The Haitian diaspora in the United States should have provided
a ready link of aid and experience back to the ancestral homeland. But two
factors conspired to defeat democracy's hopes. The first was the lack of any
substantial, self-sustaining civil society infrastructure. But the second,
and a factor no less important, was the inability of the leadership to
promote fundamental change in society.
Last fall, Ray
Takeyh and I took a considerable amount of flak for suggesting that, in
order to pursue fundamental economic and social reforms, an Iraqi government
would need to be insulated, for the short term, from popular pressure in
order to make the "hard decisions." But comparing the experience of two
relatively poor countries – Jordan
and Haiti – shows that having a government somewhat insulated from pressure
from below can help to build stable, viable institutions. In
Haiti,
the government moved to dismantle institutions such as the military but was
unable to construct new bases for support.
"Creative
destruction" failed in Haiti because the soil was not fertile for building
the institutions needed to shape and sustain a liberal democracy. And the
government lacked the power to force through the changes that would be
needed. And this raises questions for the fate of the other island in the
Caribbean currently enduring an authoritarian government. When biology
"solves" the Cuban question, what happens to the existing institutions of
government? Will they be dismantled as part of the ancien regime? Or
will they be maintained and "democratized" from within? Or are we pinning
our hopes on an exile community that will be able to return and assume
power?
And what does this
portend for the end result of two other major interventions designed to
reshape an entire society and create vibrant, flourishing, tolerant liberal
democracies and multi-ethnic societies, namely Kosovo and Iraq? If Haiti's
ten year experiment under a restored Aristide is the roadmap, are the other
two on the same track about to reach the same stations--peacekeeper
overstretch, donor fatigue, failed institutions, exit strategy?
What now for Haiti?
New elections? Investment in the re-creation of a professional and
nonpolitical military able to serve as the arm of a rejuvenated state?
Targeted aid for reconstruction?
And here, I think
the best advice needs to be: modernization first, democratization second.
Nikolas K.
Gvosdev is the editor of In the National Interest. |