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	Conned by Democracy:  
	The Middle East's Stagnant Change  
	By Ramzy Baroud 
	Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 8, 2010 
	   Democracy in the Middle East continues to be a hugely popular 
	topic of discussion. Its virtues are tirelessly praised by rulers and 
	oppositions alike, by intellectuals and ordinary people, by political 
	prisoners and their prison guards. Yet, in actuality, it also remains an 
	illusion, if not a front to ensure the demise of any real possibility of 
	public participation in decision-making.   Bahrain was the latest Arab 
	country to hold free and fair elections. It managed a reasonable voter 
	turnout of 67 percent. The opposition also did very well, winning 45 percent 
	of the seats. In terms of fairness and transparency, the Bahraini elections 
	could serve as an excellent example of how ‘things are changing’ in the 
	Middle East. More, they might provide Western leaders, such as US President 
	Barack Obama an opportunity to commend the contribution of American guidance 
	to ‘progress’ in the region.    In actual fact, nothing is changing – 
	except for the insistence by some that it is. Arab governments have made two 
	important discoveries in the last decade.    The first discovery is 
	that US interests cannot peacefully co-exist with true democracies in the 
	region. Egypt had a rude awaking in 2005, when Muslim Brotherhood candidates 
	won fifth of the votes, if not more. This was followed by the unmatched 
	democratic revolution in Palestine when Hamas won the majority of the vote. 
	The aftermath of both of these events was enough to remind both Arabs and 
	the US of the folly of their so-called democracy project.    The 
	second realization is that Arabs are not judged by the genuineness of their 
	democracy; rather, the success of their democratic experiences is judged on 
	the basis of how well they can serve and protect US interests. Since the 
	democracy radar is measured by Washington, Arab countries deemed lacking in 
	democratic reforms are often cited as promising and fledgling democracies in 
	Congressional reports or White House statements. Countries deemed hostile to 
	US economic and political interests are remorselessly shunned, as if their 
	experiments with democracy could never yield anything of worth or 
	consideration.   These two realizations led to a superficial change of 
	course, forming a new trend that Shadi Hamid, writing in Foreign Policy, 
	refers to as “free but unfair -- and rather meaningless -- election.”    
	Free elections are known to be the cornerstone of true democracy. Thus by 
	giving the impression of freedom, automatically one tends to conclude 
	fairness. But fairness is nowhere to be found, for if it truly exists then 
	change becomes possible and is likely to follow. Those who have followed the 
	new democratic experiences of some Arab countries will have observed that 
	they have also been defined by the same political stagnation of the 
	pre-democracy years.    American journalist, Sydney J. Harris once 
	wrote, “Democracy is the only system that persists in asking the powers that 
	be whether they are the powers that ought to be.” If Harris is correct, then 
	whatever is underway in the Middle East is anything but democracy. Although 
	new parliamentarians are elected, new faces flash on television, and an 
	increasing number of women are paraded along with their male colleagues 
	following each election, the powers that be remain unchanged, unhinged and 
	truly unchallenged.    Most polls, whether conducted by Arab or 
	non-Arab pollsters, indicate that the vast majority of Arab people view 
	democracy in very positive terms. But the plot has truly thickened in recent 
	years, when on the one hand democracy has become a household name in much of 
	the Middle East, and not one ruler or government contests its virtues. Yet, 
	no true democracy has in fact actualized in any shape or form.    Have 
	Middle Eastern ruling elites figured out the democracy trick, the great con 
	of our time? Have they realized that democracy in the Middle East is only 
	what the White House says it can be?   Israel has mastered this very 
	trick since the day of its inception. This is what Hasan Afif El-Hasan 
	argues in his new and very instructive book, Is the Two-State Solution 
	Already Dead? “The identity of the Israelis in their legal documents and ID 
	cards is expressed in terms of their group religious affiliation as 
	‘Jewish,’ ‘Muslim,’ ‘Christian’, ‘Bahai,’ ‘Durzi,’ etc., where all 
	privileges are conferred by the state on the Jews by virtue of being Jews, 
	thus making Israel an religio-ethnocracy rather than a liberal democracy.” 
	  Israel’s unique democracy is in fact getting more unique, as non-Jewish 
	citizens of Israel are subjected to increasing levels of legal harassment 
	and are constantly asked to jump through all sorts of political hoops to 
	prove their loyalty to the Jewish state. Still, clever and persistent Israel 
	has managed to present itself to the world at large, Arabs included, as 
	being a model democracy.   This was and continues to be the original 
	democracy con in the Middle East. It took some Arab governments decades to 
	catch up and also present themselves as democratic, whatever the reality on 
	the ground. This is not your everyday democracy scheme. It is particularly 
	devious because it can boast of being free, fair and transparent - and the 
	numbers would actually attest to that - but the political structure would 
	still be construed in such a way that the freely elected parliaments are 
	blocked from legislating effectively to challenge the powers that be. If any 
	legislation is allowed to pass, through, say, unelected upper houses, and 
	approved by the ultimate ruler (both usually serving as an insurance system 
	against elected parliaments), it tends to be unimportant and largely 
	decorative.    Since democracy is always a work in progress, for no 
	country can claim to be perfectly democratic, then Middle East governments 
	can always use this idea to justify their own shortcomings. Expectedly, the 
	US tends to honor that, bestowing praise on their friends, and condemning 
	their enemies - the former for courageously taking on democratic initiatives 
	and the latter for failing the democracy test.   The great democracy 
	con would not succeed, were it not for the fact that many players, including 
	the US, are so invested in its success. As for the ordinary people, who are 
	eager to see their rights respected, freedoms honored, and political 
	horizons expanded, well, they can always vote – even if only their vote 
	actually counts for nothing, and only further validates the very system they 
	are trying to change.    - Ramzy Baroud (www.ramzybaroud.net) 
	is an internationally-syndicated columnist and the editor of 
	PalestineChronicle.com. His latest book is My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: 
	Gaza's Untold Story (Pluto Press, London), now available on Amazon.com. 
	 
       
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