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Townhall.com

Facing new evil empires
Diana West (back to web version) | Send

March 22, 2005

It's strange yet appropriate to be discussing Lebanon again, where the
United States began its war on Islamic terror in 1983. Or, rather, where
Islamic terror began its war against the United States.

 The fact is, in 1983, after Iranian-backed, Syrian-boosted Hezbollah
bombings in Beirut killed more than 300 Americans at the U.S. embassy and
Marine barracks, the United States just sailed away.

 We wouldn't assume a war footing against "terror" for another 20 years.
Ronald Reagan could fight only one totalitarian behemoth per lifetime, the
spreading rot he knew, communism, not the still-nippable, budding blight of
jihadist Islam. But 1983 was a good year for the Cold War: It was the year
President Reagan branded the Soviet Union the "evil empire."

 In his tiny corner of the Gulag, the renowned dissident Natan Sharansky
learned of President Reagan's establishment-quaking words. As Sharansky has
written, "Tapping on walls and talking through toilets, word of Reagan's
'provocation' quickly spread through the prison. We dissidents were
ecstatic. Finally, the leader of the free world had spoken the truth."
Sharansky experienced first-hand the transformative powers of truth and
free-world leadership: It was Reagan administration pressure on the Evil
Empire that ultimately won his release in 1986 after nine years of Soviet
servitude.

 Now, Sharansky, an Israeli government minister, has written "The Case for
Democracy," a book President Bush has declared to be a part of his
"presidential DNA." Being "the case for democracy," the book provides a
theoretical underpinning for Bush's doctrinal optimism about the
security-enhancing potential in the spread of freedom. But, as P. David
Hornik has written in the American Spectator, Sharansky's famously hopeful
philosophy is tempered by a less well-known realism. In other words, he
sees through his own hearts and flowers to the facts on the ground.

 These aren't always so pretty. But worse than the uglier corners of
reality are the efforts to hide them. Discussing the Palestinian election,
which has been followed by continued incitement and terrorism against
Israel, Sharansky told the Jerusalem Post it was "shame," as the Post
paraphrased, that "the world uses the same words for completely different
types of processes in different government systems, thereby making moral
equivalencies that don't exist." As Sharansky put it, "This election can be
the beginning of the democratic process only if we don't have illusions
that democracy is already there, and that all we have to do now is give
them independence. If this is what we do, then we will find that we have
given independence not to a democratic state, but to a terrorist state."

 This is something to think about in connection with the wider Middle East,
where there is now such a strong desire to see dictators fall and
democracies rise. Danger lurks in allowing the ideologies and bureaucracies
and armies of violence and hatred to be sucked up whole into the machinery
of democracy, as though majority-rule itself will neutralize - rather than
strengthen - such poisons. I think of this in regard to Palestinian
Authority chairman Mahmoud Abbas, himself an unrepentant Holocaust denier
(a weird counterpoint to this week's opening of a new Holocaust museum in
Israel attended by world leaders), who says the terrorist group Hamas would
and should hold seats in the Palestinian parliament. I think of this in
regard to the appalling proposition that the United States might reverse
core policy and regard the terrorist group Hezbollah as just another
political party.

 And I think of this in regard to a barely noted story of democratic
justice, Palestinian-style - 15 Palestinian Authority-scheduled executions
of "collaborators" with Israel. Presumably, these are Arabs - likely
Muslims - who have risked everything to prevent the mass murder and maiming
of Jewish civilians. Chairman Abbas' idea of judicial review has been to
turn their cases over to Sheik Akrima Sabri, who, as the P.A.'s chief
mufti, is a poster-imam for Jew-hatred and the joys of "martyrdom." Not
surprisingly, he is calling for the prisoners' blood.

 Natan Sharansky has urged Ariel Sharon to save them. "It is unacceptable,"
he wrote in a letter to the Israeli prime minister, that Israel release
hundreds of jailed terrorists "because of the hope of an opening to peace,
(while) the P.A. is about to commit state executions of people accused of
helping Israel thwart terror." Thwarting jihadist terror is what the new
and improved P.A. is supposed to be doing - along with the rest of the
Middle East, someday, the democracy-theory goes. If it doesn't, of course,
the empire remains evil, no matter what we call it.

 ©2005 Newspaper En
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"... however it may deserve respect for its usefulness and antiquity,
[predicting the end of the world] has not been found agreeable to
experience." -- Edward Gibbon, 'Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire'


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