It was August 2003 in the Iraqi city of Najaf—long before the holy city's takeover by Muslim cleric Moktada al-Sadr—and U.S. Marine Lt. Col. Christopher Conlin faced a dilemma. Arriving at a swearing-in
ceremony for Nidal Nasser Hussein, Najaf's first female lawyer and Conlin's
selection for a judgeship on the local court, he encountered a gaggle of demonstrators
protesting her appointment. Despite their relatively small number (about 30
in a city of more than half a million), Conlin relented and delayed Hussein's
appointment indefinitely.
Sadly, this episode of sacrificing Iraqi women's political participation to
pacify vocal minorities is hardly anomalous. Although the administration of
U.S. President George W. Bush extols women's advancement as a centerpiece of
its Iraq strategy, good intentions have seemingly substituted coherent policy.
The administration devoted millions of dollars to women's professional training
via the Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), the U.S. entity created to run
Iraq until the sovereignty transfer on June 30, 2004. But after Bush ended
major combat operations in May 2003, the CPA undermined its own good work by
allowing Iraqi women to become a bargaining chip in political negotiations
with powerful religious parties.
The United States thus made the classic mistake of sacrificing long-term stability
for political expediency. Failing to include women in Iraq's government notifies
other countries in the region that women's political engagement is not, in
fact, the pillar of democracy the West portrays. Ultimately, such failure could
undermine support for the U.S. mission in Iraq by reinforcing the notion that
Washington used human rights as a pretext for war rather than committing to
it out of principle. Moreover, it condemns Iraq to the fate suffered by its
Arab...