Tomorrow's historic Iraqi election is
about a heck of a lot more than choosing 275 new
parliamentarians for Iraq's first full-term, post-Saddam
government. It's equally key to fomenting change in next-door Iran
and Syria, breaking al Qaeda and serving notice on other Middle
Eastern despots that their days are numbered.
This will be no ordinary day at the polling booth. Iraqi voting
will - once again - shake the pillars of Middle Eastern terror and
tyranny like a political earthquake, creating (democratic)
nightmares for those who oppose the march of freedom across the
region.
* Iran's vigorous support for the Iraqi insurgency tells us that
the mullahs' regime is probably the one most troubled by Iraq's
democratic political revolution.
Tehran's rulers - both the senior mullahs and President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad - are under intense political pressure both at home and
abroad.
Iran is increasingly isolated internationally because of its dogged
pursuit of an indigenous nuclear (weapons) capability, as well as
Ahmadinejad's increasingly provocative anti-Israeli/anti-Semitic
tirades and historical distortions.
Having freedom and democracy right next door in Iraq will only
turbo-charge the pressure on the regime from Iran's youthful
population (60 percent under age 30), which is bristling under the
mullahs' heavy-handed rule and clamoring for greater
political/social/economic freedoms.
* Syria, another ardent insurgency co-conspirator, can't be too
happy about the Iraqi elections, either. The regime is already in
deep trouble over a U.N. investigation's strong suggestion that
it's behind the February killing of popular former Lebanese Prime
Minister Rafik Hariri in Beirut.
And now many are pointing the finger at Damascus over this week's
assassination of the prominent Lebanese parliamentarian and
journalist, Gibran Tueni - the fourth brutal murder of a prominent
anti-Syrian Lebanese figure since Syria's withdrawal this
spring.
The success of tomorrow's elections will surround Syria with
democratic states - Turkey, Israel, Lebanon and Iraq - leaving
Damascus as the odd man out in that "free" corner of the Middle
East. How long before the Syrian people become restless, asking,
"Why not us?"
* Al Qaeda is already in a tenuous state in the Muslim world. Osama
bin Laden hasn't been heard from in months. Wherever he's hiding,
it's unlikely he's directly in charge of any aspect of the
terrorist group's worldwide operations. He's become a mere
figurehead.
Meanwhile, al Qaeda's wanton slaughter - shedding innocent Muslim
blood from one end of the world to the other - is disenchanting
moderate Muslim masses, alienating potential jihadists,
discouraging new recruits and undermining its financial base.
The carnage - including last month's horrific wedding party bombing
in Jordan, the hostage-taking of Arab diplomats in Baghdad and the
slaughter of Iraqi women and children - has brought real backlash
against al Qaeda and extremism. Al Qaeda is slowly, but surely,
cutting its own throat in the Muslim world.
Moreover, al Qaeda sees democracy as the most dangerous threat to
its maniacal drive for world domination. The success of pluralism
in Iraq means another nail in the coffin for its ghastly
dreams.
Not surprising, an Internet statement from five Islamic militant
groups in Iraq - including Abu Musab al Zarqawi's al Qaeda in the
Land of the Two Rivers - called tomorrow's election a "satanic
project," promising to continue their bloody resistance to the
Iraqi's political will.
Without question, 10 to 12 million Iraqis going to 6,230 polling
places won't go unnoticed across the Middle East. More than 100
million satellite dishes will flicker images of Iraqi voters into
homes, businesses and restaurants, reaching countless
viewers.
Oppressive rulers also won't be able to ignore the fact that in
just 32 months, Iraq deposed Saddam Hussein, held free, interim
elections (8 million voting), drafted/approved a democratic
constitution in a nationwide referendum (10 million voting) and
elected a new government.
These elections - and Iraq's incredible political evolution - can't
help but have profound effect on people across the Muslim world,
especially those yearning for greater political freedom in
repressive states.
Yes, tomorrow's voting puts Iraq on a path to a brighter future.
But, equally important, it puts al Qaeda, Iran, Syria and other
despots on notice that the Middle Eastern democracy train has left
the station - and there's no turning it back.
Peter
Brookes is a Heritage Foundation senior fellow. His
book, "A Devil's Triangle: Terrorism, WMD and Rogue States," is
just out
First appeared in the New York Post