End of the Pro-Democracy Pretense
Media coverage of the Arab Spring somehow depicted the U.S. as
sympathetic to and supportive of the democratic protesters
notwithstanding the nation’s decades-long financial and military support
for most of the targeted despots. That’s because a central staple of
American domestic propaganda about its foreign policy is that the nation
is “pro-democracy” — that’s the banner under which Americans wars are
typically prettified — even though “democracy” in this regard really
means “a government which serves American interests regardless of how
their power is acquired,” while “despot” means “a government which
defies American orders even if they’re democratically elected.”
It’s always preferable when pretenses of this sort are dropped — the
ugly truth is better than pretty lies — and the events in the Arab world
have forced the explicit relinquishment of this pro-democracy conceit.
That’s because one of the prime aims of America’s support for Arab
dictators has been to ensure that the actual views and beliefs of those
nations’ populations remain suppressed, because those views are often so
antithetical to the perceived national interests of the U.S.
government. The last thing the U.S. government has wanted (or wants now)
is actual democracy in the Arab world, in large part because democracy
will enable the populations’ beliefs — driven by high levels of anti-American sentiment and opposition to Israeli actions – to be empowered rather than ignored.
Monday, January 2, 2012
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment