The rituals of swearing in a U.S. president
always touch a deep chord. Goose bumps never fail some of us, nor
does a sense of awe that this is possible in a country the size of
the United States with such a diverse population. It's a beautiful
thing to behold.
The American democratic system is so solid that it could absorb the
shocks and the challenges of the 2000 election, as well as the
jitters leading up to the 2004 election. Today, 60 percent of
Americans say they are optimistic about the future of their country
in the second Bush term.
Still, the democratic system we are fortunate enough to live under
is too easily taken for granted. Human failings -- like ambition,
envy and greed -- can cloud its fundamental importance in our daily
lives.
For this, a great antidote is Natan Sharansky's book "The Case for
Democracy," subtitled, "The Power of Freedom to Overcome Tyranny
and Terror." This "call for moral clarity" is recommended for
anyone tempted by cynicism about the democratic process.
It is also crucial for anyone seeking insight into what motivates
President Bush. After reading the book, Mr. Bush called Mr.
Sharansky and co-author Ron Dermer into the Oval Office for an
hour-long discussion. As someone who has experienced the absence of
freedom on the body and mind, Mr. Sharansky has crucial insights to
share. A political prisoner of the Soviet Union for nine years
(1977 to 1986), he earned his credentials.
In a nutshell, this is the Sharansky test for a free society: Can
you walk into the town square and shout out your views without fear
of reprisal? If you can, you have the first precondition for
democrac: freedom. If you cannot, you have a society where fear
rules.
But even in a "fear society," where habitual doublethink is
necessary for day-to-day survival, the human spirit will reach
toward freedom when it becomes a possibility. What Mr. Sharansky
wants to impress on the reader is that totalitarian societies fall
like houses of cards when the fear factor is removed. That was not
understood in the West, which watched in amazement as the Soviet
Union collapsed. Soviet dissidents, however, were not
surprised.
Mr. Sharansky especially wants to apply his experience of Soviet
totalitarianism to the Arab world today, where fear of autocratic
regimes and the harsh rules of Sharia law repress entire
populations.
If Mr. Sharansky is right to argue that Arabs have learned to live
with doublethink the way the Soviets did, they too will prefer
freedom given the chance. He firmly rejects the idea that Arab
Muslims are inherently unable to embrace freedom and democracy. If
he is right on these points, the grip of Muslim fundamentalism in
Arab populations is less firm than we in the West tend to
believe.
The case still needs supporting evidence, though. What are we to
make of opinion polls in Pakistan, for instance, that show Osama
bin Laden more trusted as a world leader than George Bush? Are we
to dismiss them as mere propaganda? Still, things are changing in
the Arab world, in part through external pressure from the United
States. In Afghanistan this fall, a population, hitherto thought
incapable of anything like democratic practices, voted by the
millions to elect President Hamid Karzai. Voters included Afghan
women, who under the Taliban regime had not even been permitted to
leave their houses.
Last week, Palestinian voters for the first time held something
resembling a real election. Rather than a one-party election giving
a rubber stamp to a dictator, Yasser Arafat, there was actually a
choice this time. That said, there are reasons to have reservations
about President Mahmoud Abbas, whose statements in favor of
terrorists during the election campaign were indeed
disturbing.
Later this month, Iraqis will elect their own government for the
first time. It can only be an incomplete vote in a country where
Sunni areas are beset by crippling levels of violence. For this
reason, doubts will surely be cast on the election's validity. The
election in itself will not make Iraq a democracy, but it could be
a crucial first step and should move ahead.
Mr. Bush on numerous occasions has stated, "Freedom is not
America's gift to the world, but God's gift to humanity." It will
be easier to bestow that gift if Mr. Sharansky is correct that all
peoples yearn to receive it.
Helle Dale is director of Foreign Policy and Defense Studies at
the Heritage Foundation. E-mail: [email protected]
.
First appeared in The Washington Times