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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-13-08 02:03 PM
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Bush's Perversion of Democracy in the Middle East
"As I would not be a slave, so I would not be a master. This expresses my idea of democracy." --Lincoln


Bush lectured the world from his privileged perch in the United Arab Emirates Sunday, in the middle of his self-orchestrated victory lap around a transformed Middle East which has been disrupted, and its alliances distorted, by the lame-duck imperialist's own meddling militarism. Schooling the Arab leaders who gathered at the luxurious Emirates Palace hotel about democracy, Bush cast himself as a crusader for liberty and freedom in his invasion, overthrow, and occupation of Iraq; and in his installation of the propped-up Iraqi regime behind the intimidation and force our military.

"A great new era is unfolding before us," Bush told the crowd. "This new era is founded on the equality of all people before God. This new era is being built with the understanding that power is a trust that must be exercised with the consent of the governed," he declared.

The "great new era" Bush spoke of, was, undoubtedly, a pat on his own back for successfully erecting a Potemkin government behind his military aggression in Iraq, which he's been able to point to as a fledgling democracy. Yet, the great crusader was seemingly oblivious to the fact that he was speaking from a country, an emirate, which is ruled by a royal family which has no use or desire for democratic reforms which would allow its subjects to directly challenge the autocracy's ultimate authority to enact those reforms.

In the Emirates, foreigners are allowed in the country to work, but are not allowed citizenship or any of the rights and protections which would go with the denied privilege. The tiny group of 'voters' who were chosen by the regime to decide the makeup of a new government advisory panel in 2006 hardly indicate a leap forward for democracy in the UAE, but Bush, nonetheless, praised their tepid moves as an "advance of freedom."

It really made little difference to the royalty and the autocrats gathered that the nation Bush is attempting to 'build' in Iraq is the product of a bloody, military takeover. Indeed, their own power was assumed after their own violent upheavals and maintained by their iron-handed dictatorships which crush any dissent that could be the impetus for democratic change. It is this very U.S. administration which has followed a long line of presidencies who have tolerated, encouraged, and sponsored these anti-democratic elements into assumed authority as the lesser-of-(decidedly more)evil influences they oppose.

The new Iraq has all of the requisites for the type of autocratic rule these Arab autocrats have grown accustomed to dealing with as they work to maintain their own heavy-handed regimes. There are the sectarian divides which keep the ruling power in a constant campaign for alliances which Iraq's neighbors will advantage themselves of. And, there are many opportunities to undermine the central authority in Iraq by supporting insurgent elements bent on armed, destabilizing resistance.

Bush, though, is satisfied that all of the constructions of his nation-building in Iraq are incorruptible and enduring. In his mind, Iraq is to be emulated as an example of a "free and just society" which has been liberated, in his mind, from the 'dangers' of the Saddam years. With hundreds of thousands of Iraqi civilians killed since the initial invasion -- despite the fighting and deaths of almost 4000 of our nation's defenders -- it's a curious boast that Bush's invasion has liberated anyone.

And, with the refusal of the Shiite-dominated regime to enact those levers of real democracy, which the country's new constitution promised Iraq's Sunni minority communities would bring balance to the lopsided rule, there is no functioning democratic government which would offer any example or blueprint for others in the region.

"We know from experience that democracy is the only system of government that yields lasting peace and stability,'' Bush told his Arab hosts.

It's a wonder though, in the face of all of the rhetoric about democracy from Bush, why his administration is set to, once again, feather the military arsenal of one of the most firm dictatorships in the region. The lame-duck militarist is heading to Saudi Arabia, Monday, with a $20 billion gift basket of advanced weaponry for the anti-democratic, royal regime. That's how much this administration cares about democracy. It makes no difference at all to Bush whether nations adhere to his fine words about 'freedom' and 'liberty', so long as they're "with us" and not "against us" in his contrived terror war.

In the new "axis of evil" Bush identified Iran, al-Qaeda, and Hamas as "threats" he intends for countries to mobilize against. More to the point, these elements he's identified are to be scapegoats for the inevitable and (many times) understandable, violent consequences of his military expansionism. They're also intended to serve as justification for each and every autocratic military maneuver and meddling Bush can manage in the year he has left in office.

Bush has signaled he's not quite ready to give up his Iraq prize. He said last week that, the "U.S. could 'easily' be in Iraq for 10 years." But, he's also declared that he'll bring "peace" to the region in the 12 months he has left. He can't have both, no matter how he casts his imperialism. It shouldn't have escaped the notice of Arab leaders that it's Bush, himself, with his tortured constructions, who is best positioned to protect and preserve their dictatorships, and help them sell their facades of democracy to the gullible among us. All tyrants, hail the master of faux-democracy. What a perfectly apt place to celebrate his fraud.


http://journals.democraticunderground.com/bigtree
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madamesilverspurs Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-13-08 03:09 PM
Response to Original message
1. Bush is the best friend
the emirates ever had. His speechwriter was clearly speaking to the pitiful remains of his base at home, although it appears that Bush himself remains convinced that Americans are too stupid to see him for what he is. No doubt there were some very sore facial muscles among his emirate hosts; it's hard to sustain the lip biting necessary to refrain from laughing for more than a few seconds. It is simply inconceivable that any in Saudi Arabia or the Emirates see Bush as anything more than a useful flunky, willing to do their bidding at the expense of the nation he claims to serve. And he's so damn dim that he actually thinks they respect him. Gag.
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-13-08 04:10 PM
Response to Reply #1
2. they were either laughing at him, or laughing with him
Edited on Sun Jan-13-08 04:11 PM by bigtree
dope or dupe, they've got him where they want him
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JCMach1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 07:02 AM
Response to Reply #1
6. You need some perspective... Emiratis are screaming today
Edited on Mon Jan-14-08 07:03 AM by JCMach1
how Shk. Mohd. (of Dubai) is Bush's new lapdog (not the other way round). The closed down the whole city of 4million to protect commander bunny pants today... sheesh.

And please don't conflate KSA and the UAE... They ARE NOT the same thing. They only share some geography and a bit of culture.

Don't even kid yourself... the Georgia National Guard could successfully invade the UAE in about 8hrs.

The UAE is reliant on US military might to maintain it's relative peace (from KSA, Iran, etc.) to do business (which is the true national religion here).
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 07:24 AM
Response to Reply #6
7. I understand that Dubai has a large Iranian business class
. . . who are worried about the posturing against Iran from Bush and about the sanctions as well. But the royals there are keeping the lid on any dissent over Bush's saber rattling from their doorstep, perhaps, because of their multi-billion-dollar weapons deals with the U.S.. Any perspective on their relationship w/Iran?
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JCMach1 Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 07:48 AM
Response to Reply #7
8. No need to keep a lid on the arms deals... those are small
peanuts compared to other stuff going on here.

Above all the UAE is a unique case and can't be compared to any other place in the world (Bush take note, HA!):

-Oil money has actually been used to grow the 'real' economy (unlike KSA and other oil producers). Oil is now less than 50% of GDP.

-It's a multicultural country... 77 different nationalities attend my University. Citizens (Emiratis compose about 15% of the population and shrinking to perhaps as low as 1% by 2020).

-Dubai is fast approaching 5million people already and is planning to crossing the 10million mark within the next 5-10yrs. making it the first new megalopolis of the 21st century.

-The UAE has made the first radical steps toward democracy (holding its first elections). While DUers might poopoo this, to do so is to ignore the fact of how small a tribal society it actually was at independence (less than 400,000 citizens). Until quite recently thinks worked quite with the Arabic traditional monarchy. Think of it as a sort of direct democracy where the majlis is always open to a member of the tribe. If rulers screwed-up to badly they would be deposed and retired. The move is towards democracy now as that system is a liability with the increased population and globalization.

-Sheesh... remember I am older than this country... How many years did it take the US to get that slavery thing right?

-Culture shock... the country has gone from tiny villages to first world in ONE generation. That means growing pains at all levels.

-You think the US has an immigration problem. Imagine having to deal with the reality that the vast majority of your country comes from somewhere else? :wtf: do you do ? The country is still working that one out.

-And yes, condition for the working class here are not nice. No unions yet. There are, however, very strict national labor laws. The trouble is that the economy is growing so quickly the bureaucracy cannot keep-up. That leads to abuses by corporations.

-Other than that, it is one of the safest places in the world to raise a family. and the pay and benefits are excellent for the highly skilled.

Please note, Bush has no clue about all of the above all of which was accomplished without his help!
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Jan-13-08 09:26 PM
Response to Original message
3. .
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 06:49 AM
Response to Original message
4. klink
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deacon Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 06:58 AM
Response to Original message
5. His 'peace' trip filled with war rhetoric. sheeeeeeeeesh. n/t
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bigtree Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Jan-14-08 12:33 PM
Response to Reply #5
9. "If this is the Bush definition of diplomacy, he needs to pick up a dictionary."
Bush tour fails to impress Arab press

{snip}

Bush's keynote speech in Abu Dhabi was "a display of the fairly muddled thinking behind the current foreign policy of the United States", said the Saudi Gazette.

"The part about (Iran) intimidating neighbours with alarming rhetoric sounds suspiciously like the US these days, though the Bush administration uses its alarming rhetoric -- followed by invasion -- to intimidate countries."

It added: "And still, despite the heightened rhetoric, accusations and threats, the US refuses to hold direct talks with a country in which it has meddled for half a century.

"If this is the Bush definition of diplomacy, he needs to pick up a dictionary."

Back in the Emirates, the Khaleej Times said the best way to persuade Iran to reach a compromise over its nuclear ambitions was "diplomacy and peaceful engagement".

It added: "The Middle East and Gulf region, already suffering from two conflicts, cannot afford any more tensions. Peace and only peace is the way forward."

Official newspapers of Iran's closest ally Syria slammed Bush for his attempts to rally Arab allies around his policy of hostility toward Tehran.

"In asserting the security of Israel and trying to mobilise Arab hostility against Iran, Bush is drawing up a project of war," said the official daily Ath-Thawra.

http://www.africasia.com/services/news/newsitem.php?area=mideast&item=080114132304.7n2n3ffj.php
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