Americans always have been an audacious people. In 1776, a group
of patriots dared to declare independence from Great Britain. They
had no constitution and no reason to believe they could militarily
defeat "Mother England."
In addition, a large percentage of the people who would become
"Americans" actually opposed the Declaration of Independence. These
colonists wanted to remain part of the British Empire. Before we
could become the United States, Americans had to fight a revolution
against the British and, all too often, against their own
neighbors.
But the desire for freedom is a powerful thing. It won out and
allowed us to build the greatest country in history. And as we
celebrate our Independence Day, we have an additional reason to be
happy: Americans have long lived in freedom and this year, Iraqis
do too.
On June 28, in the blistering heat of a Baghdad summer, the United
States returned control of Iraq to Iraqis. "This is a historic,
happy day, a day that all Iraqis have been looking forward to. It's
the day we take our country back," said interim president Ghazi
Yawar.
It won't be easy. In 1776, during the blistering heat of a
Philadelphia summer, the signers of the Declaration of Independence
stated that King George III "has erected a multitude of New
Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people
and eat out their substance."
But the British monarch was nowhere near the tyrant Saddam was. For
decades, the Iraqi dictator raped and pillaged his country, living
like a king in his many palaces and gathering riches from the
corrupt United Nations Oil-for-Food program. Meanwhile, his thugs
executed some 300,000 Iraqis, and millions more faced
starvation.
That's why today's Iraqi leaders realize there's still difficult
work ahead. "Our dear Iraq is now at a setback, but it is a very
temporary setback," interim Prime Minister Ayad Allawi announced.
"We will rise up after that like mountains, standing up very firm.
And we will protect all the people regardless of religion, color or
any other consideration, so every Iraqi will have the right to a
unified, united Iraq where brotherhood and justice prevail."
And it's not just Iraq's leaders who realize things are getting
better. A female doctor named Lina Ziyad recently told The Wall
Street Journal, "Under Saddam, we lived in a big prison. Now
we're in a kind of a wilderness. I prefer the wilderness." And
former military officer Qasim Mohammed told the Los Angeles
Times he wanted to thank the U.S. for getting rid of Saddam
Hussein. "This day shows the true good intentions of the U.S.," he
said. "It seems we are moving forward to democracy."
Mohammed no doubt would recognize Thomas Jefferson's words
published on July 4, 1776, and since repeated thousands of times
all around the world: "Governments are instituted among men,
deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed."
Saddam Hussein clearly didn't enjoy the support of his people. Like
all tyrants, he held power by force, and it took the military might
of the U.S.-led coalition to remove him and make a new government
possible.
But in the new Iraq, we're seeing a government of the people, by
the people and for the people. Iraqis now hold sovereignty over
their own country, and elections are planned for early next year.
The winners truly will be governing with the consent of the
governed.
As President Bust recently put it, that's good for Iraq and good
for the entire Middle East: "A free and sovereign Iraq is a
decisive defeat for extremists and terrorists, because their
hateful ideology will lose its appeal in a free and tolerant and
successful country."
More than 225 years ago, our founding fathers dared attempt
something that many people said couldn't be done. The republic they
launched is now the envy of the world. Hopefully, decades from now,
June 28 will be for Iraqis what July 4 is for us: A key milepost on
the road to freedom.
Ed Feulner is the president of The Heritage Foundation
(heritage.org), a Washington-based public policy research
institute.
COMMENTARY
The Road to Freedom
Jul 2, 2004 2 min read