European Media Calls George W. Bush Visionary
By: Rachel Marsden
A new article in Der Spiegel magazine—the German equivalent of Time or
Newsweek—applauds George W. Bush for his vision of democracy in the Middle East,
and credits him for the fact that authoritarian regimes in the region are being
kicked to the curb.
"Painful as it may be to admit, it was the despised former U.S. President George
W. Bush who believed in the democratization of the Muslim world and incurred the
scorn and mockery of the Left for his conviction," says the piece by Jan
Fleischhauer.
Hear that? That's the sound of bowls full of Whole Foods organic granola
smashing to the ground. Before we get carried away and cause people to dive off
bridges as a result of having to think of George W. Bush as a Nobel Peace Prize
candidate, let's consider some reasons presented by various sources so far as to
why Bush may not, in fact, be responsible for the tsunami of change we're
currently witnessing in Islamic nations.
1. The wave of change started in Africa, with the people of the Ivory Coast
elections in December 2010 refusing to allow permanent fixture President Laurent
Gbagbo to stay in power after losing democratic elections to rival Alassane
Ouattara. The people rioted until he left, during which the UN reported hundreds
of arrests, dozens of murders, and significant torture by Gbagbo's men. This was
arguably the spark that ignited the whole region: Just a democratic election in
which someone refused to rightfully vacate his seat. Days later, the people of
nearby Tunisia seem to have decided that their guy, Ben Ali, had been in power
long enough (23 years) and wasn't likely to leave of his own volition. So they
gave him a bit of a shove.
2. George W. Bush may have said he had a vision of Islamic democracy, but what
he really meant was that it was a side-effect of avenging his dad in the wake of
the Gulf War. Kind of like when so-called do-gooders volunteer to be candy
stripers in hospitals, not because they enjoy giving of themselves to people
suffering, but rather because they like that sweet discount they get on the
cafeteria food.
3. Bush didn't "show a man how to fish." He reached into the swamp, pulled out
the shark with his bare hands, and hanged it in a secure facility north of
Baghdad. You're not supposed to do that. You're supposed to wait until the
locals figure it out. But would the other Islamic countries living under
authoritarianism have figured it out on their own—or was Iraq an icebreaker?
4. Bush didn't invade Saudia Arabia. Or Iran. Or strap himself onto the back of
a rocket and take care of business himself like in Dr. Strangelove. So he
clearly didn't do enough!
5. War doesn't create peace. Naive kids in floppy blue hats traipsing around in
conflict zones create peace and change. Through joy and smiles, silly.
6. The Internet did it. (LOLZ!) Keyboard warriors making FaceBook pages/groups
and Twittering viciously caused real-world dictators with guns, weapons, and
armies to capitulate. (LMAO!)
Theories abound, but there was only one man in recent memory who actively
leveled the field, in the legitimate opening provided by the September 11
attacks, to give the seed of democracy a chance in both the Islamic nations of
Afghanistan and Iraq. And he did it for one very clear reason from Day 1, and
which he still repeats: To provide a beacon of democracy in the Middle East, an
example for others to follow. Maybe that hope is indeed playing a factor in the
collapse of the regimes we're currently witnessing.
Or maybe it's just a total coincidence that the interests of the average person
in the region are now directly aligned with Bush's vision and actions, for which
he has been—and is still—horribly maligned. If people are willing to credit
silly Internet entries of 140 characters each for such massive change, then
perhaps we can agree that it would be reasonable to acknowledge the efforts of a
President whose entire mandate was focused in part on this phenomenon coming to
fruition.
One thing that Bush can no longer be criticized for is "making things worse" in
the region—unless one believes that people overthrowing authoritarian regimes on
their own is a bad development. What ends up replacing these governments is
another issue—but the opportunity is now there for them to not blow. Nor do I
care to hear a peep from current or former EU leaders who profited from
exclusive trade relationships with these dictatorial regimes (Chirac—good luck
in your corruption trial this year), while either sitting on their hands during
Bush's active efforts or criticizing his vision outright.
Then there are those who take it a step further and accept flights and vacations
provided by this same type of paper tiger dictator in Egypt (former French Prime
Minister Francois Fillon) and Tunisia (French Foreign Affairs Minister Michele
Alliot-Marie and her junior government minister husband, Who F. Cares),
apparently not noticing or caring that crawling into the dumpster might in fact
result in being taken out to the dump along with the trash.
Much like George W. Bush, I suppose I can still dream.
COPYRIGHT 2011 RACHEL MARSDEN