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Iraq: A tactical Setback, A Strategic Gain

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  • Iraq: A tactical Setback, A Strategic Gain

    Asharq Alawsat (The Middle East), UK
    Aug 19 2005

    Iraq: A tactical Setback, A Strategic Gain

    Amir Taheri
    19/08/2005


    Is the decision by the Iraqi National Assembly (parliament) to
    postpone for a week its scheduled debate on a new draft constitution
    "a major setback" for the newly liberated nation, a or just a bump on
    the road to democratization?


    There is no doubt that many who are nostalgic for the days of Saddam
    Hussein had been hoping and praying that the 15 August deadline would
    not be met. These are people who want Iraq to fail so that they could
    prove that George W Bush and Tony Blair were wrong in toppling the
    Ba'athist regime in Baghdad.

    The postponement was a setback if only because this was the first
    time that the new leadership was unable to meet a political deadline
    it has fixed for itself. One cannot begrudge the opponents of the
    liberation their unique moment of jubilation.


    But if this was "a major setback", as some dons of dilatory deeds
    have claimed, why did Iraqi lawmakers broke into spontaneous applause
    after they had voted to postpone the constitutional debate? Did they
    know something that the serial filibusterers on Capitol Hill didn't?

    The answer is that while the postponement was a tactical setback for
    the Iraqi lawmakers it represented a strategic advance for the
    practice of democracy in the newly liberated country. The Iraqis
    working on the draft resisted intense pressure from all quarters,
    including Grand Ayatollah Ali-Muhammad Sistani, the Shiite top
    cleric, and the US Ambassador to Baghdad Zalmay Khalilzad, to brush
    disagreements under the carpet and come up with "something." They
    were told to set aside the contentious issues and offer the assembly
    the apple-tart and motherhood parts of their exercise.

    But the drafters understood that the goal of the exercise could not
    be making everybody happy for a brief moment. They understood that
    the object of democracy is not to make everyone happy on every issue
    every time. In fact, the opposite is often the case if only because
    democratic decisions based on compromise as they are bound to be,
    never fully satisfy anyone. What matters in democracy is that
    everyone should feel happy about the way decisions are arrived at.

    As far as the way decisions are made is concerned, the overwhelming
    majority of Iraqis are happy. They know that the days when a
    mustachioed despot could impose any constitution on them are gone,
    hopefully for good. They also know that no single group can impose
    its will on all others. More importantly, they know that if they
    ignore the wishes of the people they wouldn't be able to look their
    neighbors in the face.

    It is disingenuous to make much of the fact that the Iraqis have not
    succeeded in writing a constitution in three months.

    The physical act of writing a constitution is not difficult.

    The late Ayatollah Khomeini asked one of his minions to translate the
    constitution of the Fifth French Republic and then added a few
    articles to enshrine his own despotic rule. The exercise took a few
    days. The Pakistani military dictator Zia ul-Haq once told me that he
    could write a new constitution "in a mater of weeks, if not days."
    General Douglas Macarthur is said to have assigned one of his
    secretaries to write the Japanese Constitution, again in a matter of
    days.

    But the American "founding fathers" needed three years to write a
    constitution which was, subsequently amended two dozen times.

    And then remember that all "the founding fathers" were Christian
    Protestant English gentlemen sharing the same ethnic, linguistic and
    cultural background.

    Iraq's "founding fathers", however, represent a complex mosaic of
    ethnic, religious, and linguistic communities. The whole thing is
    further complicated by the fact that five rival political coalitions,
    representing some 60 different political parties- from the Communists
    to the Islamists and passing by secularists and monarchists- are
    involved in the writing of the constitution.

    On top of all that the debate over the new constitution was widened
    to involve virtually all Iraqis. Over 300 constitutional conferences
    were held throughout the country, enabling some 50,000 people to
    express the views of countless trade unions, cultural associations,
    women's organizations, human rights groups, guilds, tribal
    leaderships and religious fraternities. An even broader debate took
    place through the newly-born private media, including 150 newspapers,
    dozens of talk-radio stations and half a dozen television channels.

    Thus the exercise went far beyond a political task assigned to a
    committee and developed into a nationwide course in politics, human
    rights, civic duties, and public ethics. Many Iraqis discovered the
    complexity of their society for the first time. They saw that Iraq
    did not consist of the uniformed, mustachioed and gun-toting
    individuals who marched in front of Saddam Hussein's giant portraits
    like so many robots.

    "I didn't know that we had a Luri minority," a highly educated Iraqi
    friend told me the other day.

    "I had no idea that many Iraqi Kurds were Shiites," another Iraqi
    friend admitted.

    Others discovered that there are Iraqi Turkmen, Yazidis, Assyrians,
    Armenians, Chaldaeans, and Ahl-e-Haq in addition to a variety of
    Kurds, Arab Sunnis and Arab Shiites. Iraq's ethnic, linguistic and
    religious diversity is further complicated by a rich array of
    political and ideological sensibilities. On the left there are
    Marxist-Leninists, Trotskyites, Maoists, and Labour Party-style
    social democrats. On the right there are Islamists of a dozen
    different sensibilities. In the middle there are democrats,
    republicans and liberals who aspire after a Western-style system.

    Imposing a constitution on all these different strata at gunpoint may
    be easy. Getting them to agree on one is less so.

    Recently, The Americans took six months to appoint an Ambassador to
    the United Nations, and, even then, failed to agree. So imagine if
    the Americans were to write their constitution in the multicultural,
    multi-ethnic and politically divided United States of today rather
    than in the homogenous country it was two centuries ago.

    There is no doubt that every political move in Iraq today should take
    into account two factors: the fight against the terrorists, and the
    need for an early end to the US-led coalition's military presence.
    The speedy introduction of a draft constitution would be helpful on
    both accounts. But it would be wrong to see the drafting of the
    constitution as nothing but a tactical move related to the war
    against terrorism and the departure of the foreign troops.

    While the Iraqis must work hard and fast to meet the new deadline
    they have set for themselves, there is no need to sacrifice quality
    to speed. The terrorists will continue killing the Iraqis with or
    without a constitution but are ultimately doomed to defeat. The
    departure of he foreign troops is equally inevitable, although it
    could be speeded up through the Iraqi political process.

    The constitutional debate has turned Iraq into a giant school for
    democracy. A nation that had been terrorized into silence for more
    than half a century is beginning to learn to talk, to debate and to
    engage in polemics. People, who never thought anyone would bother
    about their views, or whether they could have any views of their own,
    are now beginning to discover the power that they could have as
    individuals and groups in a democracy. The new political elite is
    learning the art of negotiation, diversion and, yes, even
    filibustering. In Iraq today the past is fighting the future. The
    future is sure to win.
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