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Invited, almost seduced, by the BBC reporter Lyse Doucet, Kofi Annan said what
I least wanted to hear. Hadn’t things, as “some Iraqis” suggest, been better
under Saddam Hussein? “If I were an average Iraqi,” replied Mr Annan,
“obviously I would make the same comparison, that they had a dictator who
was brutal but they had their streets, they could go out, their kids could
go to school and come back home without a mother or father worrying: ‘Am I
going to see my child again?’”
Playing this discussion at the level of rhetoric would be easy, but stupid. I
didn’t want to hear Mr Annan’s opinion because, of course, I worry it might
be true. In January 2005 Iraqis voted in their millions, and were — as far
as anyone can tell — happy to do it, also presumably hoping that this meant
peace and liberty. In December 2006 bodies turn up in their dozens on
wasteland and in backstreets, US and British soldiers die, and the people
who went back to Iraq in 2003 are leaving again. Things may be less
catastrophic outside Baghdad and the Sunni triangle, but they’re still
pretty bad.
Perhaps then, we should have left Saddam alone. Or, even, if we were to be
more honest, co-operated with him as we did in the ’80s, knowing — as was
argued then — that the present chaos was quite possible in the eventuality
of him being toppled. This alternative was spelt out with great honesty by
Kevin Toolis (and with more subtlety by Anatole Kaletsky last week) on these
pages last month when he wrote: “Sometimes we need to praise tyrants rather
than depose them. No one deserves a dictator, but in the real world the vast
majority of mankind will have to endure one. The very least the Western
powers can do is not to replace the devil the oppressed know with the
madness of the death squads that now rule Baghdad.” I hope some of my
anti-war and instinctively anti-interventionist colleagues won’t mind me
saying that Toolis represents the logic of their own views. And let’s agree
that they could be right.
It’s an old question, of course. What do we wish for others; do we want order
or democracy? Peace or liberty? Yes, both of course, but what if there has
to be a choice? Do we prefer tyranny and safety to freedom and terrible
insecurity (in so far as you can be safe under tyrants and free when you are
insecure)? Perhaps the concentration on freedom and democracy is the
middle-class journalist’s obsession, when what “ordinary” people want is
bread and shelter. Security first, a free press second.
It isn’t meant as a confession when I remind myself and you that I was brought
up in a family and in a social grouping that was committed to the cause of
communism. There were many things that communists did (always outside
communist countries, it has to be said) that were admirable. They supported
independence for India, civil rights for blacks, majority rule in South
Africa, when the establishment parties in this and other countries were
apathetic or even hostile to all those causes.
And then we made excuses for Russia, and when we talked about democracy we
didn’t mean it. We wanted strike votes to be by show of hands, not by secret
ballots, lest the bourgeois press contaminate the process of decision — and
because we knew that we were more likely to win that way. We celebrated the
anniversaries of Lenin’s coup d’état, and airbrushed out
his contribution to the eventual Stalinist tyranny.
Titanic forces and impersonal events had almost necessitated the monster, we
reasoned. You cannot make the omelette of earthly paradise without breaking
a few hundred thousand eggs. Hadn’t Russia been historically chaotic and
therefore historically authoritarian? And hadn’t Stalinism mobilised the
necessary resistance to Hitler, without which we in the over-scrupulous West
would all now be dead or wearing lederhosen? The same was true for China.
Without Mao, and despite his “excesses”, China would have been a country of
warlords and bound feet.
Later we said that the Russians might be given to “dealing administratively”
with dissidents, having an unfortunate tendency to find them insane and slap
them in asylums, but the Soviet education and welfare system was supposedly
wonderful, just as the main defence of Fidel Castro today is based on
ignoring the jailed and occasionally tortured opponents and concentrating on
what Castro has done for the Cuban health system.
Democracy — who for? You can’t have democracy when people have no jobs, no
homes or whatever it is they have none of at the moment. The German
Democratic Republic may be a bit dour and repressive, but look at the youth
clubs it builds for its fair-haired teenagers! And then, sometime later, the
Wall is down, the extent of the Stasi’s activities exposed and the nature of
the failure of the system becomes apparent to all but a few diehards and a
group of anti-American eccentrics who — to this day — take the tyrant’s
shilling in order to tell the world that Belarus is better off under its
journalist-murdering regime.
Our cynical use of the word “democracy” was mirrored by some cold warriors on
the Free World’s side, who could use the same logic to help oust democratic
governments in Latin America and encourage pro-Western despots —
neo-fascists in the service of democracy. There were other groups then who
would tell you that it was Generalissimo Franco or another civil war, so the
West should get behind the old man. Which, tacitly, is what it did.
And perhaps these early Toolises were also right. In January 2005 it seemed
that the majority of Iraqis wanted democracy — but maybe we should have
realised both that an ultra-violent minority wouldn’t permit it, and that
unless they were allowed to have their way, then they would create chaos. Of
course, left alone, they would rule with electrodes, committees for public
safety and bans on internet sites, but if their citizens didn’t speak out
(or weren’t confused with someone who might speak out) they’d make it
through. Just say what the authorities wanted you to say, shop your
neighbour as required, and reflect on the fact that even if things aren’t
hunky-dory, everyone would still have to agree that they were.
Let’s say that Kevin Toolis is right and I — because my history has made me
over-compensate — am wrong. How many deaths is the right to vote actually
worth? None? A thousand? Or the right of women to education? Or the right to
speak out? If the answer is “not many”, then let’s get cosy with the
murderers . . . try to edge them towards civilised behaviour. Let’s agree
that the process of arguing for the freedom of others, let alone acting on
it, is likely to be counter-productive. But please let us not commit the
hypocrisy of voicing support for the work of Amnesty International or
expressing shock at the killing of Anna Politkovskaya. Eggs break.
David Aaronovitch is a writer, broadcaster and commentator on international politics and the media. He writes for The Times Comment page on Tuesdays. He has previously written for The Guardian, The Observer and The Independent, winning numerous accolades, including Columnist of the Year 2003 and the 2001 Orwell prize for journalism. He has appeared on the satirical TV current affairs programme Have I Got News For You and made radio broadcasts on historical topics
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