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Contributors
Bruce S. Thornton - Contributor
Bruce Thornton
is a professor of Classics at Cal State Fresno and co-author
of Bonfire
of the Humanities: Rescuing the Classics in an Impoverished
Age and author of Greek
Ways: How the Greeks Created Western Civilization (Encounter
Books). His most recent book is Searching
for Joaquin: Myth, Murieta, and History in California (Encounter
Books). [go to Thornton index]
THE
RIGHT BOOKS: Equipping the Conservative
Transformation
of Freedom
A review of The Case
for Democracy by Natan Sharansky
[Bruce S. Thornton] 12/24/04

|
The
Case for Democracy
The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny
and Terror
by Natan Sharansky with Rom Dermer
|
When
Natan Sharanksy talks about political freedom, it behooves
us to listen. Sharansky spent nine years in a Soviet
prison for
fighting on behalf of human rights and the right of emigration
for Soviet Jews; for him the ideals like freedom that too often
we in the West take for granted or treat as philosophical abstractions
are concrete and real, as are the consequences when such freedom
and respect for human rights are lacking. After his release
from the Soviet gulag, Sharansky emigrated to Israel, where
he has
been a minister for the last nine years in several Israeli
governments, giving him a front-row seat on the blunders, naiveté,
bad faith, and sheer ignorance that has since Oslo characterized
the West's attempts to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian Arab crisis.
This unique perspective informs Sharansky's exposition of his
book's central thesis: democratic governments accountable to
free citizens create a world that is orderly, stable, and peaceful,
and so the Western liberal democracies have a moral and practical
obligation to foster democracy and to condition their relations
with non-democratic states on the sincere efforts of the latter
to give human rights and political freedom to their own citizens.
The Case for Democracy, though, is much richer than the foregoing
description of its thesis suggests, as important as that idea
is, particularly as the same ideal undergirds the Bush administration's
policy in the Middle East.
Sharansky
starts with an analysis of "free" societies
and "fear" societies. A society is "free" if
it passes the "town square" test: "Can a person
walk into the middle of the town square and express his or her
views without fear of arrest, imprisonment, or physical harm?" Such
societies will be free, if not always just. But those societies
that flunk the "town square" test are "fear" societies,
unfree and unjust. Sharansky goes on to describe the consequences
of living in a fear society, which typically fractures into three
groups: "true believers," those who sincerely believe
in the regime's ideology; "dissidents," those who oppose
the regime and speak out against it; and "doublethinkers," those
who oppose the regime yet do not publicly express their opposition,
particularly to outsiders.
This gap
between private belief and public speech with which "doublethinkers" live
often makes it difficult for outsiders to gauge the level of
dissatisfaction among the citizens of autocratic societies, and
hence visitors often credit those regimes' propaganda that their
citizens are content with things as they are. Certainly, the
existence of large numbers of "doublethinkers" in the
old Soviet Union contributed to the ease with which Western observers
were duped into missing the vast tides of unrest that ultimately
sent Soviet communism into the ashcan of history. Something has
to explain how someone as smart as Harvard economist John Kenneth
Galbraith could write in 1984, only six years before the Soviet
Union's implosion, "The Soviet citizen-worker, peasant,
and professional----has become accustomed in the Brezhnev period
to an uninterrupted upward trend in his well being," in
the same year also claiming "that the Soviet system has
made great material progress in recent years." Such deception
is made easier because, as Sharansky notes, "many outside
observers have an ideological bias that allows them to willingly
suspend their disbelief and not see the effects of tyranny."
More important, Sharanksy argues that since the
number of "doublethinkers" always
is greater than the number of "true believers," outside
recognition and support of dissidents and "doublethinkers" can
embolden both into working against a tyrannous regime. Once a
critical mass of people experience what Sharanksy calls the "exhilaration
of freedom," the regime's days are numbered, for all people
everywhere prefer freedom to fear. This is one of Sharansky's
most important assumptions: that the desire for political freedom
is not culturally determined but universal to human nature, and
so all peoples no matter how oppressed have the potential to
become free.
Sharansky tells two other stories, both fascinating
and important. The first is the "inside" story of the Soviet Union's
demise, a story whose hero for Sharansky is Ronald Reagan. Contrary
to those who think that the Soviet Union would have collapsed
without Reagan's willingness to confront Soviet aggression (though
you can count on half of one hand the number of Western "experts" who
predicted such a collapse), Sharansky makes it clear that the
previous policy of accommodation and détente, based on
the mistaken notion of Soviet economic prowess, was "effectively
propping up the Soviet's tiring arms. Had that accommodation
continued, the USSR might have survived for decades longer." Unlike
the so-called diplomatic "realists" and academic experts
who assumed the Soviet Union was here to stay, Reagan knew that
a society based on repression of its own people harbors a fatal
flaw that with outside pressure can lead to collapse. The détente
touted by the majority of these "experts" was simply
a way for a tottering regime to buy a few more years of life
by technological and economic infusions from the West.
Reagan's willingness to call the Soviet Union
an "evil
empire," to meet aggressively every instance of Soviet adventurism,
and to link the United States' dealings with the Soviets to improvements
in human rights all raised the price of oppression for the ruling
elite to prohibitive levels. Gorbachev's last desperate attempts
to salvage communist rule with "glasnost" and "perestroika" simply
opened the floodgates, sweeping away the Soviet Union and its
satellite tyrannies in Eastern Europe. But "glasnost" and "perestroika" were
last-ditch policies compelled by the willingness of Reagan, Margaret
Thatcher, Senator Henry Jackson, and others to put the Soviets'
feet to the fire on the issue of human rights. "Had Reagan
chosen to cooperate with the Soviet regime," Sharanksy writes, "rather
than compete with it, accommodate it rather than confront it,
the hundreds of millions of people he helped free would still
be living under tyranny."
The other story Sharanksy tells is of the many
missed opportunities and failed policies that have worsened
the Israeli-Palestinian
Arab crisis. Because many in the West failed to see that Arafat
was the ruler of a fear society, they didn't realize that the "Zionist" enemy
was necessary for Arafat and his cronies to maintain their power;
thus there would be no ultimate resolution of the crisis, for
any such agreement would end Arafat's autocratic kleptocracy: "For
six years, Arafat built a society based on fear, maintaining
his repressive rule by mobilizing his people for war against
the Jewish state." Thus after Oslo, "as Arafat was
signing agreements and accepting the Nobel Peace Prize, his PA
[Palestinian Authority]-controlled media was inculcating a generation
of Palestinians to hate the Jewish state, and his PA-run schools
were educating Palestinian children from textbooks that had literally
wiped Israel off the map." The result was the second intifada
and the terror attacks that killed more Israelis than in any
period of Israel's history.
The mistake of Oslo was to legitimize and finance
Arafat and the PA without demanding as a precondition a politically
accountable
democracy for the Palestinian people: on the contrary, "By
allowing, and often encouraging, Arafat to create a fear society,
a peace process that should have been steadily reducing a century-old
animus had instead exacerbated it." This strange accommodation
and at times appeasement of a terrorist like Arafat had many
reasons beyond the mistaken belief of the Americans and some
Israelis that only a strong man like Arafat could rein in the
militant terrorists. Sharansky gives Israel's critics like Amnesty
International the benefit of the doubt when he attributes their
relentless criticism of Israel's presumed human rights abuses
and their silence about those of Israel's non-democratic neighbors
to a conscious policy not to distinguish between "free" and "fear" societies.
One could argue for more sinister reasons-anti-Semitism or anti-Americanism
displaced on to Israel, America's alleged neo-colonial "client." But
whatever the motive, the result has been a "dangerous moral
equivalence" between open societies like Israel, accountable
to their citizens, and autocratic societies where human rights
abuses are the policy of governments accountable to no one.
Sharansky's rejection of "moral equivalence" is part
of his call for "moral clarity," which not only entails
an understanding of the important differences between a "fear" and
a "free" society and an insistence that a government's
oppression of its own citizens always be on the table in its
relations with democratic states, but also "demands an understanding
of context, of cause and effect. It demands a sense of proportion." The
lack of such clarity on the part of the Western democracies,
particularly the Europeans, has contributed to what surely must
be one of the most bizarre phenomena in diplomatic history: the
spectacle of a state victimized by fifty years of terrorist murder
of its citizens being turned into an international pariah subject
to vicious censure and condemnation even as literally millions
suffer and die elsewhere.
Thus the UN-appointed International Court of
Justice condemns Israel's security fence, which has reduced
dramatically the number
of terrorist murders of Israelis, while ignoring the issue of
terrorist murder that makes the fence necessary. Thus the same
UN that castigates the unfortunate consequences of Israel's attempts
to defend the lives of its citizens ignores "serial abusers" of
human rights like Iran, Cuba, Syria, and China and even lets
them sit on its Commission on Human Rights, a body to which Israel
is forbidden to belong. Thus Israel's volunteer ambulance service,
the Magen David Adom, is the only such organization denied admission
to the International Red Cross. This is more than a lack of "moral
clarity"--this is moral idiocy.
Sharansky's two stories converge in his proposal
for solving the Israeli/Palestinian crisis: "the same formula that had
successfully worked to end the Cold War and transform the Soviet
Union--linking Western policy to the expansion of human rights
and democracy--could work to build a genuine and lasting peace
between Israelis and Palestinians." His faith in Israeli-Palestinian
peace reflects his fundamental assumptions: "all peoples
can build free societies," including the Palestinians and
other Arabs; "the most reliable measure of a state's intentions
towards it neighbors is its treatment of its own citizens";
and so "by linking the peace process to the expansion of
freedom within Palestinian society, Palestinians will be free
and Israelis will be secure." With Arafat gone, a presumed
moderate, Mahmud Abbas, poised to take over the Palestinian Authority,
and an American administration in accord with Sharansky's views,
we will see in the next few years whether Sharansky's thesis
is correct.
At this point, however, that thesis raises some serious reservations.
Sharanksy is right to believe that the desire for freedom is
universal to humanity, and that any people can create a free
government. Yet there are other goods innate to humans--the need
for spiritual meaning and expression, and the communal ties of
kin, clan, and nation are two other important needs of people,
needs that often conflict with the need for freedom. It took
years of bloody strife in the West for the conflict between these
needs to be resolved, and no one can deny that the resolution
came at a price, such as the weakening of religious sentiment
or communal ties that characterizes many liberal democracies.
Reconciling these conflicting demands is a difficult, often bloody
task, one that will not be achieved simply by believing that
the demand for freedom will always and everywhere trump these
other powerful needs. It can, but not necessarily will do so.
Recognizing the other innate needs of people points us to the
ways in which Sharansky's analogy with the Soviet Union is of
limited utility. Soviet communism was a materialist philosophy
imposed on a deeply religious and nationalist people. To succeed,
communism had to try to suppress those religious needs and to
align its ideology with national pride. But most of all, communism
had to deliver the material goods. The Soviet regime failed at
all three: it could never eradicate religious sensibility from
the Russian people; its nationalist pride was dealt a serious
blow by its defeat in Afghanistan and by its inability to match
the United States' international clout once Reagan became president;
and the cost of suppressing its own people and maintaining its
military prowess kept it from providing the economic benefits
its ideology claimed it could provide more efficiently and justly
than democratic capitalism.
Things are very different in the Arab Middle East. There autocratic
regimes have to some degree paid homage to religious sensibility,
most obviously in Saudi Arabia, where the support and tolerance
of Wahhabism and Islamist radicalism have helped to keep the
regime in power. And Arab nationalist pride is gratified by opposing
the world's foremost bastion of liberal democratic freedom, the
United States, which to the Islamist religious sensibility is
a godless Sodom of materialism and depravity fostered by rootless
individualism and irresponsible license camouflaged as prosperity
and democratic freedom. So even though the needs for political
freedom and material prosperity aren't being met by autocratic
Middle Eastern regimes, religious and nationalist needs to some
degree are. It is still an open question how long such regimes
can continue to perform this delicate balance, given the forces
of globalization and electronic communication that every day
leave the citizens of Middle Eastern autocracies more aware of
how farther and farther behind their societies are. But we can't
simply rely on the power of one human need, freedom, ultimately
to prevail over others equally powerful, in the absence of a
demonstration that devastating failure accompanies the neglect
of political freedom.
And here is where Sharansky's other analogy falters as well--the
evocation of Germany and Japan's transformation into liberal
democracies. But Sharansky fails to mention one important factor
in that transformation----the utter obliteration of those two
societies in World War II, a devastation that convinced them
beyond the shadow of a doubt that the way of fascism and militaristic
racism was suicide. The Middle Eastern fear societies have not
undergone that experience. Even in Iraq, the laudable attempts
of the U.S. military to lessen the destruction of Iraqi society
have left a critical mass of Iraqis unconvinced that Baathism
and jihad can end not just in death but in utter failure. Part
of the difficulty Israel has faced in dealing with the Arab regimes
is that her three military defeats of them left their capitals
unscathed. The price for attacking Israel was paid only by soldiers,
never by the politicians and the people who cheered them on.
Sharansky to his credit acknowledges the special
case of the Middle East fear regimes, admitting that not one
of the 22 Arab
states are democracies, and that there has never been an Arab
democracy. But all Sharansky can say to counter his own powerful
reservations is to repeat "freedom is for everyone." Yes
it is, but so is the need for spiritual meaning, so is the need
for communal solidarity. The melancholy lesson of history that
we seem to avoid learning is that the resolution of these conflicting
human goods has always involved bloody destruction.
Whether Sharansky's faith in the universal desire for freedom
is misplaced or not in the case of the Middle East will be determined
the next few years in Iraq and in Israel. But whatever the outcome,
we should be grateful for Natan Sharansky's eloquent encomium
to the power of a freedom too many of us in the West take for
granted. tOR
copyright
2004 Bruce S. Thornton
Searching for Joaquin
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Greek Ways
by Bruce S. Thornton
|
Bonfire of the Humanities
by Victor Davis Hanson, John Heath, Bruce S. Thornton
|

Plagues of the Mind
by Bruce S. Thornton
|
Eros: The Myth of Ancient Greek
Sexuality
by Bruce S. Thornton
|
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