The Iraq War: Winners and Losers
| Friday April
18, 2003
Amir Taheri, Arab News
Staff Who are the biggest winners and losers from the war in Iraq? The biggest winner is, by far, the Iraqi people, now liberated from
the worst regime in its contemporary history. The biggest loser, of
course, is the Baathist gang that had brutalized Iraq under Saddam
Hussein. Without the forcible toppling of his regime, Saddam, who will
turn 66 next week if he is still alive, could have remained in power for
another two decades. Judging by what he did in the previous two decades
of his rule one shudders at the thought of what he might have done in
the next 20 years or so. All the champions of the idea that the Arabs deserve only dictatorial
and brutal regimes share Saddam’s loss. Also among the losers are other dictators who now know that, with the
Cold War ended, there is no Soviet Union to rush to save them at the
last moment. A trend has started in Iraq that is certain to continue
until all the remaining dictatorial regimes are thrown into the dustbin
of history. The camp of the losers also includes France and Russia, and, to a
lesser extent, Germany, who encouraged Saddam Hussein to remain hooked
to his suicidal ways until the very end. From now on no other dictator
will trust them as friends capable of coming to the rescue at a
difficult moment. President Jacques Chirac’s disingenuous assertion
that no one had the right to change Iraq’s regime was based on the
assumption that the Iraqis had chosen Saddam’s brutal dictatorship in
the first place. Fortunately there are many more winners in this war than losers. The
Arab nations are rid of a regime that had not only given all Arabs a bad
name but had acted as a center of conspiracy and aggression against many
of them. There is not a single Arab leader today who would regret
Saddam’s demise. All of Iraq’s neighbors could be included among the
winners. Iran sees the end of a regime that provoked an eight-year war
that claimed over a million lives. The toppling of Saddam also means the
closure of anti-Iranian terrorist camps maintained by Saddam on Iraqi
territory. Turkey would be a big winner, too. As Iraq’s No.1 trading partner,
Turkey is certain to play a key role in Iraqi reconstruction. At a time
that the Turkish economy is in its deepest crisis for a decade, the
reopening of the Iraqi market is the best piece of news Ankara’s new
government could have expected. Syria could also benefit from the new impetus that the change of
regime in Iraq is certain to give to the stalled the reform movement in
Damascus. Jordan, acting as Iraq’s natural outlet to the sea, is
likely to benefit from its neighbor’s economic revival. Iraq will also
provide the Hashemite kingdom with additional geopolitical depth. Kuwait could also be regarded as a big winner. The next Iraqi regime
is certain to take legal and political steps to relinquish all
territorial claims against Kuwait. The return of confidence and
stability could help propel the Kuwaiti economy, in stagnation since
1990, back into robust growth. The entire Gulf region, and beyond it the
OPEC nations as a whole, will also benefit from the end of Saddam’s
regime. Saudi Arabia, too, will be among the beneficiaries of regime change
in Iraq. The Baathist tyranny in Baghdad was like a time bomb that was
bound to explode at some point. In the longer run the United States and its key allies, especially
the United Kingdom, must also be regarded as big winners. The common
wisdom right now is that George W Bush and Tony Blair are the biggest
winners from the toppling of Saddam Hussein. This is certainly true in
the short-term. Both men are enjoying exceptionally high popularity in
the polls. What might happen to them in the medium and long-term,
however, remains to be seen. Most democracies have the strange habit of
kicking out leaders who have won wars. The tradition goes back to
ancient Athens, the first democracy, in which any leader who returned
victorious from a war was sure to lose his job. Think of Churchill, who was defeated in the first general election
after his World War II victory. And, more recently, we had President
George Bush, the father, who lost his re-election bid despite the
highest-ever popularity ratings after the war to liberate Kuwait. One of the key characteristics of democracy is the people’s
ingratitude toward their leaders. It is only in a dictatorship that the
people are forced to be grateful to the ruler, praising his generosity
and wisdom every day. In a democracy the best compliment to pay a leader
is to kick him out in the next election. Arab News Opinion 18 April 2003 |
Copyright 2014 Q Madp www.OurWarHeroes.org