steve wrote:About the only successful coup the US has ever engineered was the removal of Australia's Prime Minister Gough Whitlam in 1975. Hooray! We knocked-off the government of a prison island!
Imposing democracy is impossible. It happens when there are democrats willing to die to create it for themselves, and not before. In some circumstances (most third world people qualify), people would rather live as they are accustomed than suffer chaos in the hope of attaining a status that will mean little to them in practical terms.
Does a goat herder care who controls the money in the banks he will never visit, or who writes the laws that will never reach as far as his village, or if he may vote for a head of state who cares not a whit for him?
No, but he would like to keep the use of his arms, and would like his sons to live to adulthood. Creating war around him is not to his benefit in the slightest.
Steve, I suspect your objections are not purely pragmatic, but since your argument is that's what I'll address. (Even as I try to reduce my political posting. To think that I came by here to check up on the music scene!)
It's good to learn from history. I'm already on record as being against siding with tyrants who happen to be the enemies of our enemies. As I mentioned earlier it undermines one's moral authority, and is usually bad tactics in the long run anyway.
But history also teaches us that it's dangerous to over generalize. Each situation is unique, and "fighting the last war" is generally a bad idea.
Most of the examples you cite are cases where the US propped up a dictator or otherwise was self-serving to the exclusion of the interest of others. (Politics is always somewhat self-serving. But it's good to be helpful at the same time. Win/win and all that.)
In the specific case of Iraq we are not talking about a nation of goat herders. Iraq is also, relative to others in the region, a somewhat secular society. We are talking about a sophisticated technologically adept people who want to participate in the world, but have been oppressed by a despot.
I agree that democracy can't be imposed. It's almost a contradiction in terms. But that's not what is happening in Iraq. We didn't sponsor a coup. And we didn't install a puppet to run the country for us. (There were some not-so-great guys some of the Bush crowd tried to push forward, but it didn't work, and I say good for the Iraqi people for having their own mind, and good for us for ultimately respecting their democratic choices.)
We overtly removed him from power. And then a sort of bootstrapping process was started with the Iraqis themselves controlling more and more of their own country.
As I noted somewhere before at least some Iraqis tried to take down Saddam, but without outside help they simply couldn't overpower him...despite the fact that most in the country wanted him gone.
So are the Iraqis ready for democracy? The Iraqi elections were not perfect, but the level of participation is a measure of intent. From that, the best evidence for this question, I'd say the Iraqis are clearly ready for democracy. It is not being imposed. It is being embraced. The only questions remaining are tactical. How can the democratic majority overcome the violent insurgent minority, death squads, and so on?