Julius Caesar: “Let me have men about me that are fat;
Sleek-headed men and such as sleep o' nights:
Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look;
He thinks too much: such men are dangerous.”
Yond Cassius has a lean and hungry look;
He thinks too much: such men are dangerous.”
Marc Antony: Fear him not, Caesar; he's not dangerous;
He is a noble Roman and well given.
He is a noble Roman and well given.
--William Shakespeare, “Julius Caesar”
By Barry Rubin
Caesar,
of course, was right in being suspicious and Marc Antony was wrong.
Result: Caesar murdered; civil war; tens of thousands killed; Marc
Antony dead. Makes you think. Or at least it should.
An
interesting and important question about the Middle East (and one can
treat it on a global level, too) is whether being in power or running in
an election inevitably moderates those who are radicals. It is
automatically accepted by many people that this is so. Yet an
examination of evidence makes such behavior more rare than common.
Let’s
begin by pointing out that some of the problem is the unthinking
transference of things that might be true in private and
personal life into the political sphere. As individuals mature and have
experience, they often become more moderate. There are many cases of
individual politicians “selling out” and abandoning more militant ideas
to become corrupt. Neither case necessarily applies to systems,
movements, or ideologies.
Even
more questionable is the view that the difficulties of having to make
decisions in government forces leaders to become more responsible. For
example, they learn that money is not unlimited and therefore priorities
must be set. Supposedly, they say to themselves: Hey, collecting the
garbage and fixing the potholes is what's important, forget about all
this silly stuff about fundamentally transforming society, imposing the
Sharia, destroying Israel, or chasing America out of the Middle East!
A
problem with this argument is that it leaves out the political
advantages for rulers of using demagoguery, incitement, and populism. To
stay in power a politician—particularly in a non-democratic
country—gains advantage from militancy, real or feigned.
Another
simplistic argument is that anyone who runs in elections and wins is
automatically moderate because they participated in a legalistic,
democratic process. This argument is quite full of holes. One should not
confuse tactical caution with moderation. For example, President Hafiz
al-Assad of Syria knew after 1973 that a direct confrontation with
Israel was a losing proposition so instead he backed terrorist groups
and used Lebanon as a launching pad for the attacks. Being radical does
not necessarily mean being
suicidal.
Clearly,
the most famous ideological dictatorships did not become more moderate.
These include the Soviet Union, Fascist Italy, Nazi Germany, and
Communist Cuba, among many others.
But,
wait; there is an escape clause of sorts. The USSR arguably became more
moderate but only with three caveats. That process took place only
after 70 years in power. Structural changes were involved but there was
an equally or larger accidental factor, that is the coming to power of
one or two specific individuals. And after the start of a cautious
moderation policy, the regime quickly collapsed, sending a warning to
others who might have similar thoughts of loosening the reins. Indeed,
the collapse of the Soviet bloc was taken as a lesson by
Middle Eastern dictators to hang tough lest they simply hang.
One
might make a stronger case with China having moderated. But again it
took a very long time indeed, roughly a half-century and of course some
old features remain. Waiting for 50 years, however, is not what people
are talking about when they speak of the Muslim Brotherhood taking power
in Egypt and quickly becoming teddy bears.
Turning
to the Middle East, power does not bring about moderation. The Ba’thist
regime in Syria remains radical after a half-century in power and the
same would be true of Iraq if not for the U.S.-led invasion. What about
the PLO? It did sign the Oslo accords after one-third of a century of
terrorism but it did not keep the agreement as a result.
The movement’s basic doctrine and strategy remains the same while its
tactical shifts could be reversed in future.
Of
course, it seems to be a stretch to say there has been no moderation in
the PLO and Fatah. Yet let’s remember the original moderation thesis
here. The argument made in the 1990s was that the responsibility of
power (collecting garbage; fixing roads, educating the kiddies) would so
moderate the group as to lead it into a compromise peace treaty with
Israel and the end of the conflict. That certainly did not happen and
the moderation thesis was a failure regarding Yasir Arafat. As for
education, radical movements in power tend to train the children to be
radicals, preaching the horror of compromise and the glories of
aggressive war.
Hamas
in the Gaza Strip and Hizballah, which dominates the government in
Lebanon, have not moderated despite predictions to the contrary. And the
wave of Islamism in the region makes such a change even more unlikely.
Muammar Qadhafi of Libya never moderated either. He just became more
cautious after he was scared that the United States might overthrow him
in 2003, after the invasion of Iraq.
Then
there’s Iran. The Islamist regime has been in power there now for
almost one-third of a century without any clear sign of moderation. When
the revolution took place in 1979, many Western experts predicted that
the regime was already or would quickly become moderate. This was given
as a reason for supporting or at least accommodating that government.
Instead, its repression at home and efforts to spread revolution abroad
led to
war, suffering, and instability on a massive scale.
There
is, however, one apparent exception to this list of cases in which the
moderation thesis failed. Twenty-five years after the 1952 coup in
Egypt, President Anwar al-Sadat changed course. Sadat had concluded that
his regime was finished unless he did something drastic, a conciliation
process with the United States and Israel, to get back the Sinai
oilfields and reopen the Suez Canal, along with an easing of repression
at home.
Of
course, there are some ironies here as well. Egyptian President Anwar
al-Sadat was assassinated for his moderation and his regime is the one
against which the 2011 revolution was conducted and that has led to the
Muslim Brotherhood’s rise in Egypt.
Thus, the Sadat shift may be used as the best evidence for the
moderation thesis but it is hardly overwhelming proof. Then, too, while
one can cite national interests' motives it was a shift brought about by
one man and not by deeper social change, as we see today when it is
apparently being reversed.
In
contemporary Egypt, if greater moderation prevails it would be because
the armed forces tamped down on the Islamists. Yet that pressure is
opposed by the moderation thesis advocates who argue that the
Brotherhood will produce a more moderate regime on its own.
It
is far easier to challenge than to prove the moderation thesis. At the
very least it should be advocated only with great hesitation and
questioned vigorously whenever it springs
up.
Why has this not happened?
Instead,
and we’ve seen this in hundreds of examples in the “Arab Spring” case,
evidence of radicalism—deeds, writings, speeches—is systematically
suppressed in the Western debate. Examples of alleged moderation, most
often coming from public relations’ gestures or interviews with
Westerners deliberately designed to mislead them, are highlighted by
Western journalists and academics.
Because
of political reasons and especially due to the ideological monopoly of
certain forces over Western institutions, most of the academics,
analysts, journalists, and politicians who speak on these issues
get away with pushing the moderation thesis. They are virtually never
asked to provide proof. Ignorance is no doubt a factor as well. This
wrong idea thus sets current U.S. policy and creates a great risk of
future crisis, instability, repression, and severe damage to U.S.
interests.
And those who disagree, along with their evidence, are censored out of large-scale circulation to the general public.
While
moderation can occur in radical regimes it only happens under the
following conditions: a long period of time, a major personnel change in
the leadership, and devastating defeats that leaders perceive are going
to lead to their fall if not addressed. These factors don’t apply, for
example, to Iran or the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt
today who believe that--as President Barack Obama seems to agree--the
tide of history is with them. They also believe that Allah, too, is on
their side.
As you contemplate the issue you might want to see this excellent documentary made
by an Iraqi Muslim moderate who lives in Norway. The point he makes
repeatedly--and shows in his interviews with other Arabs--is that those
Muslims who oppose Islamism have no doubt about the nature of the
Brotherhood, its ideology, and goals. Indeed, they point out that the
Brotherhood doesn't even try to conceal its true nature in
Arabic-language writings and activities. Yet we almost always hear that
it is moderate in English by those granted the free run of the mass
media and
universities to inform the Western public on this issue.
And
don't miss the interview in the documentary with Gemal al-Banna,
brother of the Brotherhood's founder, Hasan al-Banna, and himself a
Muslim moderate, comparing the Brotherhood to the Communist movement and
rejecting the idea that women must wear a hijab. Those who believe in
timeless, unchanging, monolithic Islam might note that Hasan's own
sister refused to wear a hijab. As the film shows--in a sequence also
available elsewhere--the proportion of women students at Cairo
University who wore a hijab went from zero to ninety in 50 years. That's
not changeless theology but politics and a battle over how to interpret
Islam. And the radicals who have successfully brought about these
changes are not about to become moderate when they believe themselves to
be on such a historical march
forward.
Professor Barry Rubin, Director, Global Research in International Affairs (GLORIA) Center http://www.gloria-center.org
The Rubin Report blog http://rubinreports.blogspot.com/
He is a featured columnist at PJM http://pajamasmedia.com/barryrubin/.
Editor, Middle East Review of International Affairs (MERIA) Journal http://www.gloria-center.org
Editor Turkish Studies,http://www.informaworld.com/smpp/title~db=all~content=t713636933%22
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