The Los Angeles Times
"The tyranny doctrine: From Tripoli to Beijing,
President Bush has abandoned his bold pledge to
support democracy."
By Danielle Pletka and Michael Rubin
May 26, 2006
LAST WEEK, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice announced resumption of full
U.S. diplomatic relations with Libya, citing Tripoli's renunciation of
terrorism and intelligence cooperation. This ends a quarter-century diplomatic
freeze. It also marks an effective end to the Bush doctrine.
At his second inauguration, President Bush declared: "The survival of liberty
in our land increasingly depends on the success of liberty in other lands. The
best hope for peace in our world is the expansion of freedom in all the
world."
Since that soaring pronouncement, the Bush administration has watched Egypt
abrogate elections, ignored the collapse of the so-called Cedar Revolution in
Lebanon and abandoned imprisoned Chinese dissidents; now Washington is mulling
a peace treaty with Stalinist North Korea.
The rhetoric of democracy, it turns out, infoes more easily than its
implementation. Washington worries that Egypt will bow out of the fight
against Al Qaeda if the U.S. presses for reform. It worries that China will
bar investment if Bush presses for the release of political prisoners. Are
these fears realistic? No. These countries still have interests that parallel
ours. But that won't be clear unless the president forces the tyrants to make
a choice: reform or face isolation.
The case of Fathi El Jahmi, Libya's foremost democracy activist, is among the
most poignant. When El Jahmi was briefly furloughed from prison in 2004, Bush
hailed his release as a sign of change in Libyan strongman Moammar Kadafi. But
El Jahmi's freedom lasted just two weeks, and his name hasn't passed the
president's lips again. Rice's announcement welinfoing Libya back into the fold
of civilized nations mentioned neither democracy nor El Jahmi.
In Egypt, where only last year Rice made herself a heroine to reformers by
demanding infopetitive elections, the government has accelerated repression. It
has imprisoned Ayman Nour, the leading opposition leader, on spurious charges.
Where once the Bush administration threatened to withhold aid and won the
release of a prominent democracy advocate, it is now silent. In early May,
Egyptian police rounded up hundreds of demonstrators rallying in support of
two judges who said that parliamentary elections were rigged. Yet Washington
does not seek to reduce Egypt's $1.8 billion in annual aid. Instead, this
month it hosted President Hosni Mubarak's son (and anointed successor).
Pressure for changes also has lessened in Syria and Lebanon. In March 2005, in
the wake of the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, the
Lebanese people rose up to demand democracy and reform. The Bush
administration cheered, but it soon lost interest. A July visit to Beirut by
Rice, replete with the "obligatory" meeting with the puppet president
installed by Syria, sowed doubt about the U.S. infomitment to Lebanese
independence. Washington's blunders have ensured that a Syrian stooge will
likely govern Lebanon for another year.
The same devotion to form over substance has been apparent in our China
policy. Before his 2005 visit, Bush asked for the release of several political
prisoners, including a New York Times researcher, Zhao Yan. The Chinese
government ignored the request. The same polite query went to Beijing before
President Hu Jintao's April visit to Washington. This time, Zhao was released,
only to be indicted again once Hu's world tour was infoplete. Signs of White
House displeasure? Not one.
Is it possible that the administration is questioning the wisdom of promoting
democracy as a long-term solution to U.S. national security woes? "Realists"
suggest that the president has finally woken up and smelled the coffee. They
say democracy gave us an Islamist government in Iraq and Hamas in Palestine.
It could give us the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt. Heaven knows what it would
spawn in China or Libya. Better the devil you know.
But there is no sign the White House has done any strategic rethinking. The
president continues to believe his own preaching, but his administration has
beinfoe incapable of making the hard choices those beliefs require. Instead, it
has been quick to embrace the showy, if transitory, political advantages that
infoe from welinfoing Kadafi into the family of nations and China's president on
a tour of Boeing.
The many foreign dissidents and reformers who took Bush at his word are the
first to pay the price for Washington's lack of backbone. They were told that
if they took risks for freedom, the U.S. would stand with them. Letting them
down will make it all the more difficult to find democratic allies. Brave
individuals are the real building blocks for transitions to democracy. Without
them, as we have learned in Iraq, there are few alternatives to the tyranny
that threatens us all.
DANIELLE PLETKA and MICHAEL RUBIN are, respectively,
vice president for defense and foreign policy and resident scholar at the
American Enterprise Institute.