By Thomas L.
Friedman
March 24, 2012
THE historian Victor
Davis Hanson recently wrote a brutally clear-eyed piece in The National Review,
looking back at America’s different approaches to Iraq, Iran, Libya, Syria,
Egypt, Pakistan and Afghanistan and how, sadly, none of them could be said to have
worked yet.
“Let us review the
various American policy options for the Middle East over the last few decades,”
Hanson wrote. “Military assistance or punitive intervention without follow-up
mostly failed. The verdict on far more costly nation-building is still out.
Trying to help popular insurgents topple unpopular dictators does not guarantee
anything better. Propping up dictators with military aid is both odious and
counterproductive. Keeping clear of maniacal regimes leads to either nuclear
acquisition or genocide — or 16 acres of rubble in Manhattan. What have we
learned? Tribalism, oil, and Islamic fundamentalism are a bad mix that leaves
Americans sick and tired of the Middle East — both when they get in it and when
they try to stay out of it.”
And that is why it’s
time to rethink everything we’re doing out there. What the Middle East needs
most from America today are modern schools and hard truths, and we haven’t
found a way to offer either. Because Hanson is right: What ails the Middle East
today truly is a toxic mix of tribalism, Shiite-Sunni sectarianism,
fundamentalism and oil — oil that constantly tempts us to intervene or to prop
up dictators.
This cocktail erodes
all the requirements of a forward-looking society — which are institutions that
deliver decent government, consensual politics that provide for rotations in
power, women’s rights and an ethic of pluralism that protects minorities and
allows for modern education. The United Nations Arab Human Development Report
published in 2002 by some brave Arab social scientists also said something
similar: What ails the Arab world is a deficit of freedom, a deficit of modern
education and a deficit of women’s empowerment.
So helping to overcome
those deficits should be what U.S. policy is about, yet we seem unable to
sustain that. Look at Egypt: More than half of its women and a quarter of its
men can’t read. The young Egyptians who drove the revolution are desperate for
the educational tools and freedom to succeed in the modern world. Our response should
have been to shift our aid money from military equipment to building
science-and-technology high schools and community colleges across Egypt.
Yet, instead, a year
later, we’re in the crazy situation of paying $5 million in bail to an Egyptian
junta to get U.S. democracy workers out of jail there, while likely certifying
that this junta is liberalizing and merits another $1.3 billion in arms aid.
We’re going to give $1.3 billion more in guns to a country whose only predators
are illiteracy and poverty.
In Afghanistan, I
laugh out loud whenever I hear Obama administration officials explaining that
we just need to train more Afghan soldiers to fight and then we can leave. Is
there anything funnier? Afghan men need to be trained to fight? They defeated
the British and the Soviets!
The problem is that we
turned a blind eye as President Hamid Karzai stole the election and operated a
corrupt regime. Then President Obama declared that our policy was to surge U.S.
troops to clear out the Taliban so “good” Afghan government could come in and
take our place. There is no such government. Our problem is not that Afghans
don’t know the way to fight. It is that not enough have the will to fight for
the government they have. How many would fight for Karzai if we didn’t pay
them?
And so it goes. In
Pakistan, we pay the Pakistani Army to be two-faced, otherwise it would be only
one-faced and totally against us. In Bahrain, we looked the other way while
ruling Sunni hard-liners crushed a Shiite-led movement for more power-sharing,
and we silently watch our ally Israel build more settlements in the West Bank
that we know are a disaster for its Jewish democracy.
But we don’t tell
Pakistan the truth because it has nukes. We don’t tell the Saudis the truth
because we’re addicted to their oil. We don’t tell Bahrain the truth because we
need its naval base. We don’t tell Egypt the truth because we’re afraid it will
walk from Camp David. We don’t tell Israel the truth because it has votes. And
we don’t tell Karzai the truth because Obama is afraid John McCain will call
him a wimp.
Sorry, but nothing
good can be built on a soil so rich with lies on our side and so rich with
sectarianism, tribalism and oil-fueled fundamentalism on their side. Don’t get
me wrong. I believe change is possible and am ready to invest in it. But it has
got to start with them wanting it. I’ll support anyone in that region who truly
shares our values — and the agenda of the Arab Human Development Report — and
is ready to fight for them. But I am fed up with supporting people just because
they look less awful than the other guys and eventually turn out to be just as
bad.
Where people don’t
share our values, we should insulate ourselves by reducing our dependence on
oil. But we must stop wanting good government more than they do, looking the
other way at bad behavior, telling ourselves that next year will be different,
sticking with a bad war for fear of being called wimps and selling more tanks
to people who can’t read.