Opinion
Rethinking the Iraq War: Time for American Muslims to
Support Iraqi Democracy
By Shadi Hamid
There is a part of me that still is and will always be against the Iraq war.
However, noble the ends, the means will always be wrapped in a cloud of moral
ambiguity. I remain, in every sense of the word, conflicted. I remember in
the early spring of 2003, empowered by the heady idealism of a young activist,
I committed myself to the cause in which I so emphatically believed. Feverishly,
we organized against a war we felt was unjust, immoral, illegal, and destructive.
Those were times of a bygone age, times when we could still afford to believe
in a world free of hatred, violence, and – yes – war.
Without even realizing it, it seemed as if we had become perennial
protestors, angry at the world but helpless to change it. By opposing and
resisting the “system” at every turn, we thought we could change
it. Looking back, I think we were wrong.
Our goal, naturally, was to stop the war before it started (or
perhaps we were just being naïve). As millions throughout the world flooded
the streets in solidarity, it seemed – if only for a brief instant –
that we might succeed.
On January 30, 2005, I saw something which would shatter any
remaining illusions that opposing war in Iraq was the only moral position
to take. Checking the news headlines online in my apartment in Jordan, I saw
heart-wrenching pictures of thousands of Iraqis lining up, braving terrorist
threats, to vote for the first time in their lives. These days, it is truly
rare to be overwhelmed by hope, but overwhelmed I was. In a hundred years,
I expect – and I pray – that future generations will look back
at January 30th as a historic moment, a moment that would forge the identity
and aspirations of a people. For more than five decades, the Arab people have
been denied their freedom by their own leaders as well as by Western powers,
the latter fearing that free elections would lead to hostile bands of nationalists,
leftists, or, now, Islamists coming to power.
The very thought of Iraqis voting after the unceremonious toppling
of a most brutal dictator was both exhilarating and revolutionary. Millions
of Arabs throughout the region saw the same images on their television screens
via satellite channels such as Al-Jazeera and Al-Arabiyya. For those who dared
comprehend the moment, the wall of Arab autocracy was being broken down before
their eyes.
Of course, the negative aspects of the Iraq war (and there are
many) should give even the most fervent supporters of regime change pause.
More than thousand Americans and many thousands of Iraqis have died, cities
have been destroyed, and America’s credibility further eroded by the
horror of Abu Ghraib. History has recorded these crimes committed in the name
of Iraqi freedom.
In any case, as American Muslims we now have a choice. It is
not an easy one, but it is one that we must nonetheless ponder, for our actions
– or, more appropriately, our silence – will have consequences.
The war itself is over. The past is gone and we can no longer take solace
in the empty chants of anti-war protestors who seem woefully unaware of the
exigencies of political reality. The emotive chants of “bring the troops
home” are at best laughably naïve, and at worst downright offensive.
If we withdraw now, Iraq will continue its tragic descent into anarchy. And
then civil war leading to a failed state will be its fate. That much should
be obvious.
The new Iraqi government does not have the capability to effectively
put down the increasingly emboldened insurgents on its own. It needs American
and international support – and firepower. The insurgency, or the “resistance”
as some so disingenuously call it, aims through its terror campaign to derail
one of the most noble experiments of our time – the cause of Iraqi democracy.
There is there is a question that each Muslim needs to ask him/herself : do
we wish to see Iraq ravaged by civil war or do we wish to see Iraq fulfill
its promise and become the first true Arab democracy, a model of inspiration
in what is still the most authoritarian region in the world? Let us put our
dislike of Bush and his coterie of warmongering, torture-condoning neo-cons
aside, and focus on what is really important – the future of our Iraqi
brothers and sisters, who deserve nothing less than to live as free citizens,
free from the evils of autocracy and the scourge of terrorism.
Every morning, I brace myself for the inevitable headlines –
more Iraqis dead, more American soldiers killed in combat. We have paid an
enormous price with the blood of innocents. It no longer matters whether the
war was unjust or just. These debates, while interesting and at times thought
provoking, have a tendency to become, in the wrong hands, intellectually masturbatory
and philosophically indulgent. More importantly, such debates are not particularly
relevant to the immense challenges we now face. Many of us were against the
war. Some were for it. Some find themselves stuck somewhere in between. Yet
it is time now to put past disagreements behind us and unite in common cause
and solidarity for the welfare of the Iraqis.
We all too easily take refuge in the pieties of protest, thinking
that we have done our days work and spoken out against the bad men of empire
and occupation. And, indeed, our rage might be well served by shallow rhetoric
and self-pitying indignation. But, this is not the time for such selfishness
or silence in the face of greater threats. There is a bloody conflict currently
underway between those who engage in the wanton killing of innocents in the
name of “resistance” and those who wish to see the Iraqi people
move courageously toward a free, dignified, and democratic future. And I suspect
that this time around, the moral position is a clear one – or at least
it should be. There are some things in life, politics, and war which are morally
ambiguous. This, however, is not one of them.
Civil Society