Saturday, October 3, 2015

When did Regime Change Replace Democratic Elections?

I’m confused. Has it suddenly become okay to take up arms against a legitimate government? The US Declaration of Independence asserts that: 
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.-That whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness.”
This text written to justify armed rebellion against the British government that ruled America as a colony was swept under the carpet after the mid-nineteenth century civil war that opposed the Northern and Southern States, replaced by the mantra that in a democracy, change can only be effected through ‘the ballot box’.
And yet, suddenly with the war against Iraq in 2003, “regime change” became an acceptable notion, tripping off the lips of military men, politicians and the press whenever they did not fell like waiting for ‘the ballot box’. Not even Russian air strikes against ISIS  This week’s condemnations of Russia for bombing Syria’s ‘moderate’ opposition, provides an ideal opportunity to show up the disconnect between America’s historical commitment to “free and fair’ elections, and its military pursuit of regime change in foreign lands.  The accusations imply that it is ok for ‘moderates’ (whatever that may mean in any given political context) to oppose a government by force, whereas ‘radicals’ - such as communists or islamists - are for some mysterious reason barred from doing so.  
Russian President Vladimir Putin is not trying to recreate the Soviet Union, however, he defends the same principle as the Communist state: non-interference in a country’s internal affairs by another country.  That principle does not appear in any of the US’s founding documents, however, it is fundamental to the concept of a United Nations, which the US was instrumental in bringing into existence.
President Barack Obama misses no opportunity to accuse Russia of behaving as if ‘might made right’, of being a ‘big country’ imposing its will on ‘smaller countries’ (such as the Crimea, which is not a country, but a region that was attached to the country of Ukraine by Russian presidential fiat in 1954).  In the Alice in Wonderland world of the American president, there is no contradiction between recovering a crucial military facility from a foreign government turned enemy, and threats of forced ‘regime change’ against democratically elected rulers.
Have America’s intellectuals as well as the American public so abandoned the use of logic that they fail to see the contradictory nature of our President’s pronouncements? When did ‘regime change’ become part of United States - or United Nations’ - principles?
Equally important, though not as fundamental, is the contradiction between defending ‘moderate’ opposition forces seeing the violent overthrow of an elected government and the statement that of rule of law alone legitimizes a government. “Killing his own people”, the label stuck onto Assad, precludes any recognition that a legitimate government cannot allow itself to be overthrown by force; that its first duty is to defend its people - who have spoken via an election - from having the government they have chosen taken from them in an armed conflict. A civil war is never started by a government: it is started by a group that seeks to overthrow the government, and every government in the world will respond militarily.  When the United States government went to war against the southern states it was not because those states sought to overthrow it: they simply wanted to leave it.  Yet we seek to overthrow Bashar al-Assad because he kills those of his people who seek to overthrow him.
Such is the power of language that the phrase ‘regime change’ a staccato three-syllable motto, has wiped away two centuries of commitment to ‘one man, one vote’ and ‘change through the ballot box’. Although many commentators and activists disagree with the president’s policy, none have expressed is as a fundamental contradiction to America’s founding documents, which presidents are bound to protect. Instead we now have so-called ‘R2P’ (‘responsibility to protect’ civilians whose governments are resisting their attempts to overthrow it ) and ‘regime change’ to suit our own purposes.

As I have written before, and will continue to affirm until someone contradicts me, the above-stated policy is implemented exclusively vis a vis  left-leaning governments.  So determined is the US to cleanse the world of left-leaning regimes, that it accuses Russia of bombing so-called ‘moderates’ while recognizing the fact that materiel given to these self-same moderates often ends up in ISIL hands. The US would rather risk betrayal by pro-capitalist Muslims, then save an anti-capitalist Muslim regime.

1 comment:

  1. Great point. This morning I was driving while listening to NPR where a dude from the Council on Foreign Relations explained Russia's involvement in Syria by Putin's personal hatred of "democratic movements" seeking to overthrow the government. I wish I could ask him to give me his definition of a "democratic movement".
    BTW tomorrow is exactly 17 years since Yeltsin the democratizer killed "his own people" who happen to defend democratically elected Russian parliament, which he disbanded by his unconstitutional decree. I did not hear a peep from the West.
    Double standards, lies and propaganda.

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