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 Should America Be Involved in Democracy Promotion 
	in the Arab World?  By James ZogbyAl-Jazeerah, CCUN, April 23, 2012 
 
 For the past three decades, democracy promotion has been a staple, though 
	oftentimes understated arm, of overall US foreign policy. President Jimmy 
	Carter advocated this agenda. Ronald Reagan advanced it as a weapon in the 
	Cold War. And Presidents since then have embraced democracy promotion 
	initiatives, though none with the ideological fervor of George W. Bush.
 Of late, this agenda has become a topic of heated debate here at home 
	and abroad. Some of these programs are under assault in Arab countries, 
	while in Washington, Bush-era critics of the Obama Administration are 
	attacking the President saying that he hasn’t done enough to promote 
	democracy in the Arab World, nor has he acted to defend US democracy efforts 
	abroad.
 
 Some of these Bush Administration officials were on hand for 
	a conference on democracy promotion at Kenyon College this past week, making 
	their case. I was a participant at the event.
 
 The advocates of 
	democracy promotion advance a number of arguments to make their case: “it’s 
	about being true to our values,” “it’s in our interests,” “it is our moral 
	obligation to improve the human condition”—all of which resonate with 
	American audiences who reflexively respond to any mention of “our ideals” 
	and appeals to “American exceptionalism.”
 
 But as vigorous and at 
	times passionate as this entire US conversation might become, it ignores one 
	fundamental question that must be addressed at the outset, and that is, 
	“should America even be involved in democracy promotion in the Arab World?” 
	In my remarks to the Kenyon College event, I provided a contrarian view that 
	said, quite simply, “no.”
 
 I have a number of reasons for taking this 
	stance. First and foremost, it is because I believe that America is not in 
	the position to be the democracy promoters we fashion ourselves to be. We 
	fail to recognize the damage that has been done to “brand America.” While 
	many Americans still want to see ourselves as “the shining city on the 
	hill,” we simply do not understand that is not how most Arabs see us. Two 
	disastrous and bloody wars in Iraq and Afghanistan; the blind eye we have 
	shown to Israeli violations of Palestinian rights and life; Guantanamo and 
	the horrors of Abu Ghraib; torture, rendition, and “black sites”; and the 
	treatment of Arabs and Muslims in America all have taken a toll on our 
	credibility as advocates for democracy and human rights.
 
 Our polling 
	across the Arab World shows that not only has America’s favorable rating hit 
	bottom, but when asked to name “the biggest threat to peace and security in 
	the region,” more often than not, the U.S. is named.
 
 As
	our polling makes 
	clear, what most Arabs want from America is not democracy, it is for 
	Washington to play a role in pressuring Israel to end its occupation of 
	Palestinian lands. Additionally, many Arabs believe that U.S. investment can 
	help create employment and build capacity in their countries. And despite 
	the fact that in a number of Arab countries, reform and democracy concerns 
	have emerged in the top tier of political priorities, in no case do Arabs 
	indicate that they want American help in advancing these concerns. This they 
	see as an unwanted intrusion into their domestic affairs.
 
 There are, 
	of course, those elements who do seek American support. Some in the Libyan 
	and Syrian opposition have reached out in desperation, basically hoping that 
	the U.S. would do a “job” for them. There are also some “democracy” 
	activists who have found it useful to cultivate U.S. patronage. But none of 
	these change the reality that for strong majorities across the Arab World, 
	American involvement in democracy promotion is not wanted or seen as 
	credible.
 
 The reality is that because we don’t listen to
	
	Arab voices or respect Arab public opinion, we operate blindly in the 
	region, seeing what we want to see and hearing only those voices who say 
	what we want to hear. We don’t understand Arab society or the Arab people’s 
	political priorities or their real aspirations. Because of our sense of 
	cultural superiority, we assume a “one size, fits all” model. Those who want 
	what we have to offer, we celebrate as democrats, “just like us.” Those who 
	do not, we decry as backward.
 
 In the end, we have too little 
	knowledge about the history, culture, and people of the region to play a 
	constructive role in transforming their societies. Our mistake in 
	Afghanistan and Iraq was not just that we believed that we could use force 
	to create a democratic order. It was that we assumed that we could play any 
	constructive role in changing countries and peoples about whom about whom we 
	knew so very little in the first place. This was true for our failed wars, 
	and it is also true for our efforts at democracy promotion.
 
 To his 
	credit, President Obama got it right a year ago when he spoke about 
	America’s role in the “Arab Spring.” He noted that we needed to approach 
	these developments with a sense of humility. We hadn’t created the Arab 
	Spring (despite the vain attempts by some former Bush Administration 
	officials to claim credit), nor could we lead or direct its course. What we 
	could do is help with economic assistance to provide the promise of a better 
	future and by solving the Arab-Israeli conflict. The President was right. 
	But this, sadly, is what we have yet to do.
 
 
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