The Myth of the Useful Dictator

In propping up autocrats in countries like Yemen and Bahrain, the United States has long weighed its interests against its principles. Is it a false choice?

BY JAMES TRAUB | MARCH 18, 2011

In a recent column mocking the argument for a military intervention in Libya, New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd cited John Quincy Adams's famous dictum that the United States "goes not abroad, in search of monsters to destroy." Foreign-policy realists count Adams as their founding father; like him, they view American meddling in the internal struggles of faraway places as a species of national folly.

The Arab world has a way of turning American policymakers into realists: The stakes are just too great for it to be otherwise. Anyone can thunder against rogue leaders in Sudan or Zimbabwe, or for that matter in Libya, where the United States has no vital interests. In the Middle East, where publics disagree -- often vehemently -- with Western policy on Israel, counterterrorism, and Iran, unaccountable leaders are prepared to ignore public opinion so long as they see those policies as in their country's (or their own) interests. What's more, autocrats offer a form of one-stop shopping that makes them vastly easier to deal with than parliaments and an unbuttoned media.

But the events now transforming the Arab world illustrate the degree to which Adams's intellectual heirs are making a false choice. America's national interests now depend on the well-being of people in remote places as they did not in the early 19th century. The chaos not only in Libya but in formerly staid autocracies like Bahrain and Yemen seriously threatens American interests and shows how foolish it was to have counted on the stability of these states.

This sentiment has, it's true, become something of a cliché. George W. Bush's administration, of course, acknowledged the limits of realism. But outside Iraq, Bush's policy in the region -- like that of nearly all his predecessors -- proved to be vastly more realist than its rhetoric. In a famous 2005 speech in Cairo, Condoleezza Rice admitted that "For 60 years, my country, the United States pursued stability at the expense of democracy in the Middle East -- and we achieved neither." But, she said, the United States had come to understand that in the long run despotic regimes eventually lose their legitimacy, and thus stability. Rice herself, like the rest of the democracy-promoting Bush administration, ultimately wound up betting on stability rather than democracy in Egypt and elsewhere in the region; the pressure of short-term interests ultimately prevails over the calculus of long-term benefits. Thus the Middle East policies of U.S. presidents tend to be a great deal more realist than the rhetoric.

American presidents seem destined to make the same fine professions, then pursue the same apparently pragmatic line, and finally learn the same painful lessons again and again. President Barack Obama only jumped on the bandwagon of change in Egypt and Tunisia when it turned into a juggernaut, at which point the merits of dealing with an autocrat had become moot. Like his predecessors, he has refrained from any public criticism of the domestic policies of Saudi Arabia, which can turn the oil spigot on or off at will.

But realism doesn't look as realistic as it used to. Saudi Arabia, at least for the moment, looks unshakeable, but what does Obama do about the American allies desperately resisting calls for change and doing terrible damage in the process -- that is, Bahrain and Yemen? In Yemen, after weeks of relatively peaceful mass protest, government troops have fired on protesters, reportedly killing dozens. Before the massacre, there was some reason to hope that a compromise solution might be possible, because President Ali Abdullah Saleh had promised not to run again, though he had refused to step down before the end of his current term in 2013 -- as the opposition has insisted he do. Both sides may emerge so hardened from this new bout of violence that U.S. and European diplomats will be able to do little to help bring them together.

ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Images

 

James Traub is a contributing writer for the New York Times Magazine and author of, most recently, The Freedom Agenda. "Terms of Engagement," his column for ForeignPolicy.com, runs weekly.

OCASSIUSO

1:36 AM ET

March 19, 2011

our pocket dictators

The article's title suggested at least a quick survey of some our less savory dependents--Pinochet, Marcos, Suharto and so on--you know, a little historical context. But nothing.

 

RAINBOW2011

12:36 PM ET

March 20, 2011

Obvious Hypcracy

Its amazing,we are attacking LIBYA but dictators in BAHRAIN AND SAUDI ARABIA have license to kill their peaceful demonstrators.

 

OLIVER CHETTLE

2:33 PM ET

March 20, 2011

The word is hypocrisy. But

The word is hypocrisy. But there is such a thing as context. Just because a country can't intervene everywhere, it doesn't follow that is shouldn't intervene anywhere.

From Europe's point of view, Libya is part of the wider Euro-Mediterranean world, which has been a geopolitical entity for three thousand years, this merely having been obscured by the irruption of Islam. Europe's zone of interest is Russia, North Africa, Anatolia, and the Levant, because events in these regions have a direct impact on Europe, not filtered through another region. E.g. Libyan refugees can head directly to Europe. Thus Europe should be willing to intervene in a country like Libya, which is part of the zone of interest mentioned above, but not in Afghanistan which isn't.

This particular intervention is reasonable because there is a fair chance of success: a weak opponent, a substantial Libyan rebel movement, high accessibility to all the key cities from the sea and European bases, and a good chance of rebuilding the country afterwards because it has plenty of cash. Few of those conditions applied in Iraq, almost none in Afghanistan.

As for the United States, it shouldn't be in the Middle East at all.

 

HASS

11:48 AM ET

March 21, 2011

Nothing new

Is this new? We armed Saddam and gave him targetting intelligence for his chemical weapons use against Iran, and tried to pin the blame of his gassing of the Kurds in Halabja onto Iran. Videos of Rumsfeld shaking Saddam's hands from the time are all over YouTube. Is it any wonder that Iranians laugh when a US president moans about human rights in Iran? Over 60,000 Iranians were killed by the US-backed use of chemical weapons by Saddam.

 

DENCAL26

12:02 PM ET

March 19, 2011

Dennis D

Would I prefer the Shah over Ahmadinajead? Of course. Would I prefer a US Friendly dictator in Lebanon over Hezzbollah? Of course.

 

OLIVER CHETTLE

2:18 PM ET

March 20, 2011

You can't have those things

You can't have those things in perpetuity because all oppressive regimes fall in the end, always have, always will. A policy that does not take that into account is a wilfully dumb head in the sand policy, and cannot be in the West's long term interests.

 

HASS

11:43 AM ET

March 21, 2011

Ahmadinejad is not a "Dictator"

The question isn't what YOU would prefer but what the people of those countries prefer. We had to put the Shah (and his father) in charge, but the people of Iran VOTED FOR AHMADINEJAD (yes, like it or not, they did and despite all the allegations of election fraud, there was never any actual evidence of it provided.)

 

THE GLOBALIZER

12:51 PM ET

March 21, 2011

I'd prefer cake...

...since we're out of bread.

 

JEAN KAPENDA

5:37 PM ET

March 19, 2011

It's All About Freedoms Vs. Captivity

Of all human aspirations, freedom remains the king of all: freedom to live, freedom to prosper, freedom to act and not being acted upon, freedom to fail, freedom to succeed, etc. Freedom is what makes humans human. The forces of the evil will always attack freedom and they will always use dictators and dictocrats (a new term I've coined for African dictators who get "democratically" and fraudulently elected) to oppress and try to destroy God-given freedoms, no matter if it's in today's Congo, Rwanda, Uganda, Zimbabwe, Gabon, Equatorial Guinea, Venezuela, Russia, Tunisia, etc. The world destiny is precisely the result of this very struggle between those who champion freedoms and those who've chosen to serve the enemy of righteousness. What the oppressed are claiming now is freedom and freedom in abundance all over the globe. Freedoms are the core of national prosperity and the backbone of the world security. The world seems to forget that a Nazi dictator caused World War II. Tahrir Square has made it clear: the world does NOT need any dictator or dictocrat!

 

MARTY MARTEL

10:21 AM ET

March 20, 2011

The myth of universal acceptance of democratic principles

To think that people of all the countries cherish America’s or West’s democratic values itself is a myth. Islamic societies by their very character do not want to be genuine democracies in the Western sense of the word.

Most of the Islamic countries love to live under Koran's Sharia laws of middle ages even if they have so-called modern day democratic institutions.

That is why US-created Karzai government was forced to deport an Afghan for converting to Christianity because he was sentenced to die for that heinous act under Sharia law.

That is why a Pakistani woman was stoned to death for an alleged affair under Sharia law. That is why there was the outpouring of support for the murderer of a moderate governor in Pakistan.

That is why a Christian priest was hounded in Malaysia for using the word 'Allah' to describe Jesus Christ since Muslims do NOT tolerate the use of the word 'Allah' to describe any other GOD but their own.

That is why not just conservative sultnates like Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and Yemen but even so-called moderate Indonesian, Malaysian, Pakistani and West-created Iraqi and Afghan democracies impose death penalties on Muslims who convert to any other religion.

That is why most of the Islamic countries - monarchies, dictatorships and democracies - do not have equal rights for women and allow Muslim men to divorce their wives by a simple word of mouth.

And the current upheaval enveloping the middle east is NOT against Islam or its Sharia laws but rather it is for more mundane yet critical bread and butter issues.

People have been happy to live under dictatorships or monarchies as long as their tummies are filled. So the people’s revolt is more on economic and survival issues than on democratic principles even though Western news media has tried to paint it so.

 

OLIVER CHETTLE

2:24 PM ET

March 20, 2011

People all over the world

People all over the world have always disliked oppression, and wanted to live under better regimes. There is plenty of evidence that Islamic societies are capable of modernisation, and we should be supporting all manifestations of it, because hardline Islamic regimes will always fail to deliver prosperity and dignity to their people, and some of them will respond to that failure by turning to fundamentalism, which is provoked primarily by the humiliation of societal failure. Supporting repression will just help to perpetuate societal failure in Islamic world, and keep the terrorist instinct alive. By then, isn't that what some business interests in the United States want?

 

HASS

11:45 AM ET

March 21, 2011

Racism against Muslims

What the heck is an "Islamic society"??? Note that under Saddam, Iraqi women had far more rights than now in Iran, or ever in Saudi Arabia (our close ally).

 

KEVINSD

7:43 AM ET

March 22, 2011

Privatized monarchy

If the US wants the rest of the world to move beyond Corleone-style standards of governance, it should stand up for the simple principle that families should not be able to pass off political power--ever. In much of the world monarchies reign in all but name.

 

WGH

4:55 PM ET

March 24, 2011

I've always wondered why

I've always wondered why America always seemed so much more active trying to promote democracy in China than among her Middle East client states.

 

DOMINOMAN

7:39 PM ET

April 16, 2011

Libya is part of the wider

Libya is part of the wider Euro-Mediterranean world, which has been a geopolitical entity for three thousand years, this merely having been obscured by the irruption of Islam. Europe's zone of interest is Russia, North Africa, Anatolia, and the Levant, because events in these regions have a direct stavkove kancelarie impact on Europe, not filtered through another region. E.g. Libyan refugees can head directly to Europe. Thus Europe should be willing to intervene in a country like Libya, which is part of the zone of interest mentioned above, but not in Afghanistan which isn't.This particular intervention is reasonable because there is a fair chance of success: a weak opponent, a substantial Libyan rebel movement, high accessibility to all the key cities from the sea and European bases, and a good chance of rebuilding the country afterwards because it has plenty of cash. Few of those conditions applied in Iraq, almost none in Afghanistan.There is plenty of evidence stavkove kancelarie that Islamic societies are capable of modernisation, and we should be supporting all manifestations of it, because hardline Islamic regimes will always fail to deliver prosperity and dignity to their people, and some of them will respond to that failure by turning to fundamentalism, which is provoked primarily by the humiliation of societal failure. Supporting repression will just help to perpetuate societal failure in Islamic world, and keep the terrorist instinct alive.