Here’s one obvious lesson of the Tunisian Revolution of 2011:
paranoia about Muslim fundamentalist movements and terrorism is causing
Washington to make bad choices that will ultimately harm American
interests and standing abroad. State Department cable traffic from
capitals throughout the Greater Middle East, made public thanks to
WikiLeaks, shows that U.S. policy-makers have a detailed and profound
picture of the depths of corruption and nepotism that prevail among some
“allies” in the region.
The same cable traffic indicates that, in a cynical Great Power
calculation, Washington continues to sacrifice the prospects of the
region’s youth on the altar of “security.” It is now forgotten that
America’s biggest foreign policy headache, the Islamic Republic of Iran,
arose in response to American backing for Mohammad Reza Pahlevi, the
despised Shah who destroyed the Iranian left and centrist political
parties, paving the way for the ayatollahs’ takeover in 1979.
State Department cables published via WikiLeaks are remarkably
revealing when it comes to the way Tunisian strongman Zine el-Abidine
Ben Ali and his extended family (including his wife Leila’s Trabelsi
clan) fastened upon the Tunisian economy and sucked it dry. The
riveting descriptions of U.S. diplomats make the presidential “family”
sound like True Blood’s vampires overpowering Bontemps, Louisiana.
Tomgram: Juan Cole, American Policy on the Brink
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton recently took a
four-day tour of the Middle East, at each stop telling various allies
and enemies, in classic American fashion, what they must do. And yet as she spoke, events in Lebanon, Iraq, Algeria, and even Egypt seemed to spin ever more out of American control. Meanwhile, the regime in Tunisia, one of the autocratic and repressive states Washington has been supporting for years even as it prattles on about “democracy” and “human rights,” began to crumble.
In Doha, Qatar, in front of an elite audience peppered with officials from the region, Clinton suddenly issued a warning to
Arab leaders that people had “grown tired of corrupt institutions and a
stagnant political order” and that “in too many ways, the region’s
foundations are sinking into the sand.” With Tunisia boiling over and
food riots in Algeria and Jordan, she insisted that it was time for America’s allies to mend their ways and open themselves to “reform.” A New York Times report,
typical of coverage here, described her talk as a “scalding critique”
which also “suggested a frustration that the Obama administration’s
message to the Arab world had not gotten through.”
And there, of course, was the rub. After all, since Barack Obama
entered the Oval Office in January 2009, U.S. foreign policy has
essentially been in late-second-term-Bush mode and largely on autopilot,
led by a holdover Secretary of Defense and a Secretary of State who
might well have been chosen by John McCain, had he won the presidency.
Look at Clinton’s address again and, beyond a reasonably accurate
description of some regional problems (and that frustration), only the
vaguest of bromides are on offer.
The problem: Washington’s foreign-policy planners seem to be out of ideas,
literally brain-dead, just as the world is visibly in flux. In their
reactions, even in their rhetoric, there is remarkably little new under
the sun, though from Tunisia to India, China to Brazil, our world is
changing before our eyes.
One of the new things on this planet has certainly been WikiLeaks,
whose document dumps were initially greeted by the Obama administration
with stunned puzzlement and then with an instructively blind and
repressive
fury. (Forget the fact that the State Department should be thanking its lucky stars for WikiLeaks’
latest document dump.
Overshadowed by the Pentagon as it is, all the ensuing attention gave it a prominence that is increasingly ill-deserved.) As
TomDispatch regular Juan Cole, who runs the invaluable
Informed Comment website and is the author of
Engaging the Muslim World,
makes clear, it’s not just America’s Arab allies who are “sinking into
the sand.” These days, for the Obama administration, it’s a quagmire
world. (To catch Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast audio interview in
which Cole discusses Washington’s backing of corrupt autocratic regimes
globally,
click here or, to download it to your iPod,
here.)
Tom
The Corruption Game: What the Tunisian Revolution and WikiLeaks Tell Us
About American Support for Corrupt Dictatorships in the Muslim World
by Juan Cole
In July of 2009, for instance, the U.S. ambassador dined with
Nesrine Ben Ali el-Materi and Sakher el-Materi, the president’s
daughter and son-in-law, at their sumptuous mansion. Materi, who rose
through nepotism to dominate Tunisia’s media, provided a 12-course
dinner with Kiwi juice -- “not normally available here” -- and “ice
cream and frozen yoghurt he had flown in from Saint Tropez,” all served
by an enormous staff of well-paid servants. The ambassador remarked on
the couple’s pet tiger, “Pasha,” which consumed “four chickens a day” at
a time of extreme economic hardship for ordinary Tunisians.
Other cables detail the way
the Ben Ali and Trabelsi clans engaged in a Tunisian version of insider
trading, using their knowledge of the president’s upcoming economic
decisions to scarf up real estate and companies they knew would suddenly
spike in value. In 2006, the U.S. ambassador estimated that 50% of the
economic elite of Tunisia was related by blood or marriage to the
president, a degree of nepotism hard to match outside some of the
Persian Gulf monarchies.
Despite full knowledge of the corruption and tyranny of the regime, the U.S. embassy concluded
in July 2009: “Notwithstanding the frustrations of doing business here,
we cannot write off Tunisia. We have too much at stake. We have an
interest in preventing al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and other
extremist groups from establishing a foothold here. We have an interest
in keeping the Tunisian military professional and neutral.”
The notion that, if the U.S. hadn’t given the Tunisian government hundreds of millions of dollars
in military aid over the past two and a half decades, while helping
train its military and security forces, a shadowy fringe group calling
itself “al-Qaeda in the Maghreb” might have established a “toehold” in
the country was daft. Yet this became an all-weather, universal excuse
for bad policy.
In this regard, Tunisia has been the norm when it comes to American
policy in the Muslim world. The Bush administration's firm support for
Ben Ali makes especially heinous the suggestion of some neoconservative
pundits that George W. Bush's use of democratization rhetoric for
neo-imperialist purposes somehow inspired the workers and internet
activists of Tunisia (none of whom ever referenced the despised former
US president). It would surely have been smarter for Washington to cut
the Ben Ali regime off without a dime, at least militarily, and distance
itself from his pack of jackals. The region is, of course, littered
with dusty, creaking, now exceedingly nervous dictatorships in which
government is theft. The U.S. receives no real benefits from its
damaging association with them.
No Dominoes to Fall
The Bush administration’s deeply flawed, sometimes dishonest Global
War on Terror replayed the worst mistakes of Cold War policy. One of
those errors involved recreating the so-called domino theory -- the idea
that the U.S. had to make a stand in Vietnam, or else Indonesia,
Thailand, Burma and the rest of Asia, if not the world, would fall to
communism. It wasn’t true then -- the Soviet Union was, at the time,
less than two decades from collapsing -- and it isn’t applicable now in
terms of al-Qaeda. Then and now, though, that domino theory prolonged
the agony of ill-conceived wars.
Despite the Obama administration’s abandonment of the phrase “war on
terror,” the impulses encoded in it still powerfully shape Washington’s
policy-making, as well as its geopolitical fears and fantasies. It adds
up to an absurdly modernized version of domino theory. This irrational
fear that any small setback for the U.S. in the Muslim world could lead
straight to an Islamic caliphate lurks beneath many of Washington’s
pronouncements and much of its strategic planning.
A clear example can be seen in the embassy cable that acquiesced in
Washington’s backing of Ben Ali for fear of the insignificant and
obscure “al-Qaeda in the Maghreb.” Despite the scary name, this small
group was not originally even related to Usamah Bin Laden’s al-Qaeda,
but rather grew out of the Algerian Muslim reformist movement called
Salafism.
If the U.S. stopped giving military aid to Ben Ali, it was implied,
Bin Laden might suddenly be the caliph of Tunis. This version of the
domino theory -- a pretext for overlooking a culture of corruption, as
well as human rights abuses against dissidents -- has become so
widespread as to make up the warp and woof of America’s secret
diplomatic messaging.
Sinking Democracy in the Name of the War on Terror
Take Algeria, for instance. American military assistance to neighboring Algeria has typically grown
from nothing before September 11th to nearly a million dollars a year.
It may be a small sum in aid terms, but it is rapidly increasing, and it
supplements far more sizeable support
from the French. It also involves substantial training for
counterterrorism; that is, precisely the skills also needed to repress
peaceful civilian protests.
Ironically, the Algerian generals who control the strings of power
were the ones responsible for radicalizing the country’s Muslim
political party, the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS). Allowed to run for
office in 1992, that party won an overwhelming majority in parliament.
Shocked and dismayed, the generals abruptly abrogated the election
results. We will never know if the FIS might have evolved into a
parliamentary, democratic party, as later happened to the Justice and
Development Party of Turkey, the leaders of which had been Muslim
fundamentalists in the 1990s.
Angered at being deprived of the fruits of its victory, however, FIS supporters went on the offensive. Some were radicalized and formed
an organization they called the Armed Islamic Group, which later became
an al-Qaeda affiliate. (A member of this group, Ahmed Ressam, attempted to enter
the U.S. as part of the "millennial plot" to blow up Los Angeles
International Airport, but was apprehended at the border.) A bloody
civil war then broke out in which the generals and the more secular
politicians were the winners, though not before 150,000 Algerians died.
As with Ben Ali in neighboring Tunisia, Paris and Washington consider
President Abdel Aziz Bouteflika (elected in 1999) a secular rampart
against the influence of radical Muslim fundamentalism in Algeria as
well as among the Algerian-French population in France.
To outward appearances, in the first years of the twenty-first
century, Algeria regained stability under Bouteflika and his military
backers, and the violence subsided. Critics charged,
however, that the president connived at legislative changes, making it
possible for him to run for a third term, a decision that was bad for
democracy. In the 2009 presidential election, he faced a weak field of
rivals and his leading opponent was a woman from an obscure Trotskyite
party.
Cables
from the U.S. embassy (revealed again by WikiLeaks) reflected a
profound unease with a growing culture of corruption and nepotism, even
though it was not on a Tunisian scale. Last February, for example,
Ambassador David D. Pearce reported
that eight of the directors of the state oil company Sonatrach were
under investigation for corruption. He added, “This scandal is the
latest in a dramatically escalating series of investigations and
prosecutions that we have seen since last year involving Algerian
government ministries and public enterprises. Significantly, many of
the ministries affected are headed by ministers considered close to
Algerian President Bouteflika…”
And this was nothing new. More than three years earlier, the embassy
in Algiers was already sounding the alarm. Local observers, it reported
to Washington, were depicting President Bouteflika’s brothers “Said and
Abdallah, as being particularly rapacious.” Corruption was spreading
into an increasingly riven and contentious officer corps. Unemployment
among youth was so bad that they were taking to the Mediterranean on
rickety rafts in hopes of getting to Europe and finding jobs. And yet
when you read the WikiLeaks cables you find no recommendations to stop
supporting the Algerian government.
As usual when Washington backs corrupt regimes in the name of its war
on terror, democracy suffers and things slowly deteriorate.
Bouteflika’s flawed elections which aimed only at ensuring his victory,
for instance, actively discouraged moderate fundamentalists from
participating and some observers now think that Algeria, already roiled
by food riots, could face Tunisian-style popular turmoil. (It should be
remembered, however, that the Algerian military and secret police, with
years of grim civil-war experience behind them, are far more skilled at
oppressive techniques of social control than the Tunisian army.)
Were oil-rich Algeria, a much bigger country than Tunisia, to become
unstable, it would be a strategically more striking and even less
predictable event. Blame would have to be laid not just at the feet of
Bouteflika and his corrupt cronies, but at those of his foreign backers,
deeply knowledgeable (as the WikiLeaks cables indicate) but set in
their policy ways.
The Ben Alis of Central Asia
Nor is the problem confined to North Africa or even anxious
U.S.-backed autocrats in the Arab world. Take the natural gas and
gold-rich Central Asian country of Uzbekistan with a population of about
27 million, whose corruption
the U.S. embassy was cabling about as early as 2006. The dictatorial
but determinedly secular regime of President Islam Karimov was an early
Bush administration ally in its Global War on Terror, quite happy to
provide Washington with torture-inspired confessions from “al-Qaeda”
operatives, most of whom, according to
former British ambassador Craig Murray, were simply ordinary Uzbek
dissidents. (Although Uzbeks have a Muslim cultural heritage, decades
of Soviet rule left most of the population highly secularized, and
except in the Farghana Valley, the Muslim fundamentalist movement is
tiny.) Severe human rights abuses finally caused even the Bush
administration to criticize Karimov, leading Tashkent to withdraw basing
rights in that country from the U.S. military.
In recent years, however, a rapprochement
has occurred, as Washington’s regional security obsessions once again
came to the fore and the wars in Afghanistan and Pakistan’s northwest
tribal belt ramped up. The Obama administration is now convinced that
it needs Uzbekistan for the transit of supplies to Afghanistan and that
evidently trumps all other policy considerations. As a result,
Washington is now providing Uzbekistan with hundreds of millions of dollars in Pentagon contracts, a recipe for further corruption.
Last spring, one Central Asian government -- Kyrgyzstan’s -- fell,
thanks to popular discontent, which should have been a warning to
Washington, and yet U.S. officials already appear to have forgotten what
lessons those events held for its policies in the region. As long as
ruler Kurmanbek Bakiev allowed the U.S. to use Manas Air Base for the
transit and supply of American troops in Afghanistan, Washington
overlooked his corruption and his authoritarian ways. Then it turned
out that his regime was not as stable as had been assumed.
Here’s a simple rule of thumb in such situations: bad policy creates
even worse policy. The Obama administration’s mistake in ramping up its
Afghan War left it needing ever more supplies, worrying about perilous
supply lines through Pakistan, and so vulnerable to transit blackmail by
the ruling kleptocracies of Central Asia. When their populations, too,
explode into anger, the likely damage to U.S. interests could be
severe.
And keep in mind that, as the State Department again knows all too
well, Afghanistan itself is increasingly just a huge, particularly
decrepit version of Ben Ali’s Tunisia. U.S. diplomats were at least
somewhat wary of Ben Ali. In contrast, American officials wax fulsome
in their public praise of Afghan President Hamid Karzai (even if
privately they are all too aware of the weakness and corruption of “the
mayor of Kabul”). They continue to insist that the success of his
government is central to the security of the North American continent,
and for that reason, Washington is spending billions of dollars propping
him up.
Corruption Triumphant in the Name of Counterterrorism
Sometimes it seems that all corrupt regimes backed by the U.S. are
corrupt in the same repetitive way. For instance, one form of
corruption U.S. embassy cables particularly highlighted when it came to
the Ben Ali and Trabelsi clans in Tunisia was the way they offered
“loans” to their political supporters and family members via banks they
controlled or over which they had influence.
Since these recipients understood that they did not actually have to
repay the loans, the banks were weakened and other businesses then found
it difficult to get credit, undermining the economy and employment.
Thanks to the Jasmine revolution, the problem finally is beginning to be
addressed. After the flight of Ben Ali, the Central Bank director was forced to resign, and the new government seized the assets of the Zitoune Bank, which belonged to one of his son-in-laws.
Similarly, in Afghanistan, Da Kabul Bank,
founded by Karzai ally Sherkan Farnood, was used as a piggy bank for
Karzai’s presidential campaign and for loans to members of his family as
well as the families of the warlords in his circle. Recipients included
Karzai’s brother Mahmoud Karzai and Haseen Fahim, the son of his vice
president and former Northern Alliance warlord Marshal Mohammad Fahim.
Some of the money was used to buy real estate in Dubai. When a real
estate bust occurred in that country, the value of those properties as
collateral plummeted.
With recipients unable to service or repay their debts, the bank
teetered on the edge of insolvency with potentially dire consequences
for the entire Afghan financial system, as desperate crowds gathered to
withdraw their deposits. In the end, the bank was taken over by an
impoverished Afghan government, which undoubtedly means that the
American taxpayer will end up paying for the mismanagement and
corruption.
Just as the Ben Ali clique outdid itself in corruption, so, too, Karzai’s circle is full of crooks. American diplomats (among others)
have, for instance, accused his brother Wali Ahmed of deep involvement
in the heroin trade. With dark humor, the American embassy in Kabul
reported last January that Hamid Karzai had nominated, and parliament
had accepted, for the counter-narcotics post in the cabinet one Zarar
Ahmad Moqbel. He had earlier been Deputy Interior Minister, but was
removed for corruption. Another former Deputy Interior Minister
evidently even informed embassy officials that “Moqbel was supported by
the drug mafia, to include Karzai’s younger half-brother Ahmed Wali
Karzai and Arif Khan Noorzai.” This is being alleged of Afghanistan's
current counter-narcotics czar!
Or take the example of Juma Khan Hamdard, whom Karzai appointed
governor of Paktya Province in the Pashtun-dominated eastern part of
Afghanistan. A little over a year ago, the embassy accused him
of being the leader of “a province-wide corruption scheme.” He is said
to have been “the central point of a vast corruption network involving
the provincial chief of police and several Afghan ministry line
directors.”
According to that WikiLeaks-released cable, Hamdard’s network had set
up a sophisticated money-skimming operation aimed at milking U.S. funds
going into reconstruction projects. They gamed the bids on the
contracts to do the work and then took cuts at every stage from
groundbreaking to ribbon-cutting.
In addition, Governor Hamdard was reported to have longstanding ties
to the Hizb-i Islami militia/party movement of Gulbaddin Hikmatyar, one
of the Pashtun guerrilla leaders trying to expel the U.S. and NATO from
the country, who, U.S. officials claim, is in turn in a vague alliance
with the Taliban. Hamdard allegedly also has a business in Dubai in
which Hikmatyar’s son is a partner, and is accused in the cable of
funneling jewels and drug money to Hikmatyar loyalists. As with
Tunisia, the public rhetoric of counterterrorism belies a corrupt and
duplicitous ruling elite that may, by its actions, foster rather than
forestall radicalism.
Harsh Truths
For a superpower obsessed with conspiracy theories and invested in
the status quo, knowing everything, it turns out, means knowing nothing
at all. WikiLeaks has done us the favor, however, of releasing a harsh
set of truths. Hard-line policies such as those of the Algerian
generals or of Uzbekistan’s Karimov often radicalize economically
desperate and oppressed populations. As a result, U.S. backing has a
significant probability of boomeranging sooner or later. Elites,
confident that they will retain such backing as long as there is an
al-Qaeda cell anywhere on the planet, tend to overreach, plunging into
cultures of corruption and self-enrichment so vast that they undermine
economies, while producing poverty, unemployment, despair, and
ultimately widespread public anger.
It is not that the United States should be, in John Quincy Adams’s
phrase, going out into the world to find dragons to slay. Washington is
no longer all-powerful, if it ever was, and President Obama’s more
realistic foreign policy is a welcome change from George W. Bush’s
frenetic interventionism.
Nonetheless, Obama has left in place, or in some cases strengthened,
one of the worst aspects of Bush-era policy: a knee-jerk support for
self-advertised pro-Western secularists who promise to block Muslim
fundamentalist parties (or, in the end, anyone else) from coming to
power. There should be a diplomatic middle path between overthrowing
governments on the one hand, and backing odious dictatorships to the
hilt on the other.
It’s time for Washington to signal a new commitment to actual
democracy and genuine human rights by simply cutting off military and
counterterrorism aid to authoritarian and corrupt regimes that are, in
any case, digging their own graves.
Juan Cole is the Richard P. Mitchell Professor of History and the
director of the Center for South Asian Studies at the University of
Michigan. His latest book, Engaging the Muslim World, is just out in a revised paperback edition from Palgrave Macmillan. He runs the Informed Comment
website. To listen to Timothy MacBain's latest TomCast audio interview
in which Cole discusses Washington’s backing of corrupt autocratic
regimes globally, click here or, to download it to your iPod, here.
Copyright 2011 Juan Cole