January 30, 2005
HOW DO YOU SAY "END" IN ARABIC?
Iraq confounds the prophets of doom (Daily Telegraph, 31/01/2005)
That elections are a better thing than tyranny seems a truth so obvious as not to be worth stating. Yet such were the passions aroused by the Iraq war that many Western observers now find themselves hoping, disgracefully, that that country's first free poll will fail.Left-wing commentators, in Britain as in much of Europe, have focused disproportionately on the difficulties that any state must undergo during a transition process. To many of them, every terrorist bomb, every murdered election official, every sign of heightened military alertness - even the loss of a British aircraft - makes a nonsense of Iraq's democratic aspirations.
Yesterday's high turnout, in defiance of the gunmen, should be celebrated. Of course the Iraqi insurgency is an important story. But this does not explain the loving attention devoted to each setback faced by the forces of order. Compare yesterday's reports with those by the same commentators during South Africa's first democratic election. Then, too, there were many technical problems: electors who were not properly registered, voter intimidation, long queues. But these things were set in their proper context, as the backdrop against which the moving drama of people casting their first ballots was being played out. No one suggested that the clashes between IFP and ANC supporters in Zululand undermined the whole process. No one argued that the backlash by a handful of black homeland chieftains and Boer irreconcilables made South Africa unfit for democracy.
Evertime the End of History has supposedly met its match it just goes out and wins in a walkover. Posted by Orrin Judd at January 30, 2005 8:53 PM
Could the Daily Telegraph be more of a partisan rag?
The soi-disant Conservatives were as willing as the looniest of Labour's Left to criticize America's efforts in Iraq. The whole Iraq michigas(sp) has demonstrated clearly to most Americans who are with us and who are agin' us. It is painfully obvious that the bulk of the parliamentary Conservative party in Britain as exemplified by the Crispin Blunts and Douglas Hoggs and Nicolas Soames is agin' us.
All the spin-doctoring from their mercenary Fleet Street scribblers doesn't change the Hansard.
Posted by: Bart at January 30, 2005 9:08 PM