Iraq's Election
Will Not Guarantee Democracy
February 7 2005
Counterbias.com
Gene C. Gerard
The Bush administration was understandably happy with the Iraqi
election. Despite the death of approximately 50 people, 57 percent
of the population voted. President Bush declared that “The people of
Iraq have spoken to the world, and the world is hearing the voice of
freedom.” However, a quick glance at recent history easily dispels
the myth that elections lead to democracy and freedom.
After three years of political disagreements between Muslim and
socialist political parties in Algeria, both sides agreed to
participate in free elections in 1991. The Islamic Salvation Front
won the first round of parliamentary elections, garnering 59 percent
of the vote. As the country prepared for a second round of
elections, the High Council of State, which was backed by the
socialist National Liberation Front, cancelled the elections and
appointed socialist politician Mohammed Boudiaff as president. This
sparked nine years of civil war in Algeria, resulting in the death
of over 100,000 people.
Jonas Savimbi, guerilla leader of the National Union for the Total
Independence of Angola, was prompted by the Reagan administration to
discontinue fighting the government and agree to national elections
in 1992. Although Savimbi was a folk hero to some, the country voted
for the communist Popular Movement for the Liberation of Angola
party by a 20 percent margin. Savimbi invalidated the elections,
calling them fraudulent, despite the United Nations declaring the
elections to be fair. Civil war erupted, partially sparked by the
Angolan people who felt cheated when their votes were cast aside,
which lasted until 2002.
Charles Taylor, the popular rebel leader of Liberia, agreed to
discontinue his seven year war against dictator Samuel Doe and
submit to national elections in 1997. Liberians went to the polls in
record numbers, with 85 percent of the population voting. Taylor was
elected president with 70 percent of the vote. But within two years
Taylor became dictatorial himself, and guerilla movements attempted
to overthrow his government. This plunged the country into a civil
war that lasted until 2003, when Taylor was indicted for war crimes
and fled the country.
Although the election of a national assembly to draft a constitution
may lead to democracy in Iraq, it is equally possible that it may
not. If the constitution is not ratified, it may well spark civil
war. And the interim government has made it too easy to reject the
constitution. Under the ratification rules, all that is required to
defeat the constitution is for any three of Iraq’s 18 provinces to
veto it by a two-thirds vote.
Early election results indicate that the United Iraqi Alliance, the
Shiite coalition, has garnered the majority of the votes counted so
far. As such, they will have considerable influence in drafting the
constitution. Although the Alliance has publicly stated that they do
not want a theocracy, their two largest constituents, the Dawa Party
and the Supreme Council for the Islamic Revolution of Iraq, are
backed by Iran, and both have privately called for a religious
commonwealth. Yet in a recent poll, 59 percent of Iraqis do not want
a religious government. If the Alliance drafts a constitution that
allows Shiite clerics to wield too much power, it will be rejected
by secularists and Sunnis, and civil war might well be the outcome.
The Kurds turned out in large numbers as an affirmation of their
separatist movement. In the Kurdish north, those who voted for the
national assembly were also asked to vote on an unofficial
referendum on the independence of Kurdistan. Estimates suggest that
90 percent of Kurds voted in favor of independence. This past
February, various Kurdish organizations attempted to present the
American administrator for Iraq, Paul Bremer, with a petition
containing 1.7 million signatures in support of an official Kurdish
vote on independence, but they were turned away.
However, it will not be so easy to continue to ignore the Kurds. The
Kurdistan Regional Government has called for full control over
exporting their region’s petroleum. But Iraq’s finance minister
recently stated that he hopes a law will be passed to allow for
foreign businesses to invest in Iraq’s national oil company,
suggesting that this “…is very promising to the American investors
and…certainly to oil companies.” Unless the constitution supports
Kurdish independence, it will almost certainly be rejected, given
that the Kurds control four provinces.
Many in the minority Sunni population boycotted the election as a
protest against American influence in Iraq. Some Sunni polling
places reported that no one showed up to vote. Consequently, only a
small portion of Sunnis will help write the constitution. And since
it appears that the Shiite coalition will dominate the national
assembly, the Sunnis are likely to feel increasingly alienated and
disenfranchised.
The Association of Muslim Scholars, the highest Sunni authority in
Iraq, has already declared the election to be invalid and that the
constitution will not be legitimate. The association warned that if
the next Iraqi government is given legitimacy, “... this will open
the door wide for evil which the international community…will bear
its consequences.” In a recent poll, 53 percent of Sunni’s said that
the insurgent’s attacks were a legitimate form of resistance. Unless
the national assembly incorporates Sunni opinions into the
constitution, their isolation will cause the insurgency to grow. And
if they reject it, which they could do since they control three
provinces, Iraq may find itself in a civil war.
The Iraqi people should be applauded for going to the polls. But the
Bush administration should not construe voting as a guarantee of
democracy. As is frequently the case, elections have a way of
producing unintended and sometimes tragic consequences.