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Weapons of Mass Destruction (WMD)

24 March 2003

"A Fight for Freedom," by Senator John McCain

(Washington Post 03/23/03 op-ed) (870)
(This byliner by Senator John McCain, Republican of Arizona and
veteran of the Vietnam War, is in the public domain, no copyright
restrictions. It first appeared in the Washington Post, March 23,
2003.)
(begin byliner)
A Fight for Freedom
By John McCain
Critics who deem war against Saddam Hussein's regime to be an
unprecedented departure from our proud tradition of American
internationalism disregard our history of meeting threats to our
security with both military force and a commitment to revolutionary
democratic change.
The union of our interests and values requires us to stay true to that
commitment in Iraq. Liberating Iraqis from Hussein's tyranny is
necessary but not sufficient. The true test of our power, and much of
the moral basis for its use, lies not simply in ending dictatorship
but in helping the Iraqi people construct a democratic future.
This is what sets us apart from empire builders: the use of our power
for moral purpose. We seek to liberate, not subjugate.
"Experts" who dismiss hopes for Iraqi democracy as naive and the
campaign to liberate Iraq's people as dangerously destabilizing do not
explain why they believe Iraqis or Arabs are uniquely unsuited for
representative government, and they betray a cultural bigotry that ill
serves our interests and values. The apocalyptic vision of a Middle
East inflamed by American intervention ignores the fact that the
status quo bred al Qaeda and is hardly the basis for long-term
stability.
Our political goal in Iraq is the establishment of democratic
institutions. It will not be easy, but it is surely worth seeking.
American and allied personnel should stay in Iraq as long as necessary
to ensure that Iraq no longer threatens our security and to help
secure its democratic future. But to hasten that accomplishment, we
should turn over as much authority as possible to representative Iraqi
leaders as soon as possible.
Iraqi leaders should represent Iraqi sovereignty, not American
generals or international bureaucrats. Iraqis should decide their
diplomatic representations, how to vote in the United Nations, the
Arab League and OPEC. Empowering a legitimate Iraqi authority will
demonstrate that Americans are liberators, not colonizers. Democratic
development also requires "de-Baathifying" the regime, to eradicate
all remaining vestiges of the tyranny that Hussein's peerless cruelty
entrenched in Iraqi society.
An Iraqi democracy, however imperfect, could transform the way people
across the Middle East are governed. The liberation of Iraq is already
transforming inter-Arab relations. Many Arab countries are providing
assistance to our military campaign to end the Arab dictatorship in
Iraq, and several of them have made unprecedented calls for regime
change in Baghdad. This may herald the start of a new era in which
positive political forces are not strangled in their infancy by the
burden of pan-Arab fantasies.
The Arab street has been quieter than the European street, because
Arabs know Hussein's regime is monstrous. Some Arab leaders may dread
the demonstration effect of liberated Iraqis, fearing the street might
next rise up not against the United States or Israel but against them.
For decades, autocratic rulers have claimed to speak for all Arabs.
Iraq's liberation will allow new voices to define a modernity within
Arab society far different from the economic and political devastation
accomplished by Baathist national socialism, reactionary Wahhabist
zealotry and implacable hatred of Israel.
A democratic Iraq could hasten liberalization in Persian Gulf states
such as Bahrain, Kuwait and Qatar. Syria, surrounded by liberalizing
regimes in a post-Hussein order, would find itself isolated from
terrorist patrons in Tehran and facing new pressures to reform its own
decaying Baathist minority regime. Democratic revolutionaries in Iran
-- young, sympathetic to the United States and desperate for
liberation from the mullahs -- would be emboldened by seeing democracy
flourishing next door.
Reform of the Palestinian Authority -- finally underway -- can only be
strengthened by the demise of the suicide bombers' paymaster in
Baghdad. Change in Iraq and elsewhere will increase Israel's security,
indispensable to achieving an enduring peace with the Palestinians.
The Iraq campaign will demonstrate to leaders in Tehran and Pyongyang
that repressing their people and developing weapons of mass terror
make their regimes less, not more, secure. Hostile tyrants will
understand that their possession of these weapons imperils their rule
and weakens their security.
To confront the hatred that has devastated Arab progress and
threatened the United States, we should aspire to be respected by Arab
peoples and, in the case of tyrants and terrorists who threaten us,
feared. Helping Iraqis control their own destiny will demonstrate that
our real allies in the Middle East are people who yearn for freedom --
not autocratic governments that sell us cheap oil.
Americans fight and die in Iraq today not for empire, not for oil, not
for a religion, not to shock and awe the world with our astonishing
power. They fight for love -- for love of freedom, our own and all
humanity's. When the guns are silent, their political leaders must
take every care to advance the aspirations that have given their
sacrifice its nobility, and our country its real glory.
(The writer is a Republican senator from Arizona.)
(end byliner)
(Distributed by the Office of International Information Programs, U.S.
Department of State. Web site: http://usinfo.state.gov)



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