How has the US-led overthrow of Iraq’s former government
and ongoing military presence changed American and Middle Eastern societies?
Several broad answers are obvious. The 2003 war led Iraqis to more personal and
political freedoms. Yet this came alongside widespread death, violence, and insecurity, bringing back the
relevance of philosophers like Thomas Hobbes, who
prioritize the need for political order over rights and democracy. Iraq’s
Hobbesian moment also helps rationalize how the post-2001 context has given new
life to several unpopular Arab authoritarian regimes and facilitated the growth
of disciplined militias whose appeal lies in a straightforward message that
glorifies faith-based opposition to American influence in the Middle East.
In the US, the war has led to the direct or indirect pain of loss, confusion and post-traumatic adjustment as young soldiers return dead or damaged from Iraq. Also on the home front, growing worries about Washington’s ability to remake Iraq have precipitated wider doubts about our government and what it can accomplish in the world, as well as decreasing our capacity to deal with other foreign policy challenges, such as mounting Palestinian civil war or Iran’s emboldened role in the Middle East. In short, at least for now, the war in Iraq has made the US and the Middle East less stable and secure.
Yet, related to the mission of this
blog, I want to highlight a less obvious result of the 2003 war; it has
increased both the impediments to and the importance of reflective, open-minded
discussion within and across the US and the Middle East. Such discussion is, of
course, one of the greatest goals and gifts of the humanities. Yet the
post-9/11 threat of terrorism has been used to justify government clampdowns on
dissent and dialogue, in somewhat similar ways in the US and the Middle East.
After 9/11, our sense of vulnerability as a nation has eased the way for
government claims of what is needed in our national interest to trump reasoned
arguments, evidence and tolerance for intellectual difference. Many of us who
were outraged by the 9/11 attacks and concerned about Middle Eastern democracy
found our views on what we saw as common-sense questions about whether a mostly
American occupation of a diverse Arab society could bring liberal politics or
stability to Iraq distorted and critiqued. In the Middle East, even more
draconian measures to silence open political discussion have occurred, such as Egypt’s crackdown
on political bloggers. Whether through public pressure, police action or
both, government efforts to limit open debate in the name of national unity
during a crisis are easy to understand. Yet recent experience should lead us to
ask loudly -- can such efforts truly work to streamline effective policy or
meet most citizens’ needs?
A professor steeped in liberal-arts teaching like myself
is generally prone to answer “no.” One of the reasons that governments or
pro-government media outlets attack academia is not that we push biased
viewpoints or wield unfair Svengali-like
influence over our students. Rather, most of us genuinely want students to make
up their own minds and learn multi-faceted reflection about significant issues
and ideas in their lives. I believe one lesson of American and Middle Eastern
political problems in recent years is that closing off dialogue with very
different points of view only exacerbates international problems and domestic
threats to security and stability. When we allow structural or intellectual
barriers to a wide range of perspectives, we are likely to be less sensitive to
others’ objections to our fighting
faiths, whether these are the spread of Western forms of democracy or a
particular vision of Islam. That reflective debate matters and sometimes needs
defense explains the power and influence of John Stuart Mill’s famous On Liberty.
Americans and Middle Easterners need dialogue and debate
to help overcome the gulfs that have increased contemporary conflict and
insecurity; there are hopeful signs that such dialogue is not only possible,
but ongoing. On the Middle Eastern side, my recent experience as the first Fulbright Scholar professor to teach
a liberal arts course on political philosophy in the tiny Arab country of Qatar provided many opportunities to
observe open debate and inquiry on critical issues throughout the Persian Gulf.
Examples of this in which I participated personally, include:
Similarly, in addition to the ways that free debate and
education remain embedded in American law and practice, despite contemporary
pressures, some specific post-9/11, post-Iraq war developments that I have
found heartening in the US include:
When smart analysts like Samuel Huntington
opine that the contemporary world is a clash
of civilizations with the “West against the rest,” their sweeping sense is
best countered by specific encounters with the ideas of diverse people from
within these faceless entities. People like me, who have had the fortune to
build a career around such encounters, understand that overgeneralizing
differences between one “civilization” and another is not merely dangerous, but
bereft of the fun of learning and teaching inherent in these encounters.
Despite the apparently broad differences that separate the post-9/11, post-Iraq
war US and Middle East, we are not experiencing a clash of civilizations.
Rather, we are living through an orchestra of orthodoxies, loud noises
with strong institutional supports trumpeting essential difference that can
drown out quieter, individual voices of tolerance and dialogue. Rather than
working together to produce beautiful harmony, such a directionless body turns
potentially interesting debates into frightening cacophony. It is the challenge
and chance for the humanities, and the liberal arts discourse of open-minded
reflection that they champion, to counter this orchestra of orthodoxies with a
steady chorus of collegiality and cosmopolitan community-building.
-- David Mednicoff, professor of Public Policy and Legal
Studies, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Here's a link for any middle or high school teacher who want some training in the politics and culture of the middle east:
http://www.primarysource.org/programs/middleeast/default.php?sectionPage=Middle%20East&id=Summer%20Institutes
Primary Source has a summer teacher's institute (funded by MFH, I must add) called "Aspiring to Liberty: Middle Eastern Identities and Conflicts in Context." I imagine they'll organize another such institute for next summer, since this topic will be germane . . . forever.
Your observations about US "us vs. them" attitudes that impede progress remind me of something I just read in _Are We Rome?_ by Cullen Murphy, who compares Roman and US perspectives of "outsiders." He writes, "One notable constant in American history is our lack of awareness of the rest of the world--or, if we're aware, our indifference to whether we've got the world right. This may be the Western Hemisphere's distinctive form of original sin, committed when Columbus mistook his landfall for India." For more on this book, see:
http://www.arewerome.com/