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CAIR spokesman Ibrahim Hooper indicated in a 1993 interview with the Minneapolis Star Tribune that he wants to see the United States become a Muslim country.
Bugs in the Commmunity of Democracies
By R J Rummel (08/20/05)
An alliance of democracies is in the making, and it is called the Community of Democracies (CD). It is the hope of mankind, for global democratization is the way of eliminating war, democide, famine, and national impoverishment. But, you wouldn't know it from the difficulties that the CD is having. The problem is a simple one. The national and personal interests of the elected leaders of democracies get in the way of what should be an international cooperative effort among the democracies. More specifically, the voters of these countries, to which their leaders are beholden for their power, are not aware of the incredible value of democracy to humanity's hopes and welfare, and what globalizing democracy would mean to them personally. The problem is education, the media, and politicians. This I hope blogdom, websites such as mine, and the rest of the Internet can help.
I include here an "A Tool for Democracy Could Use Some Help" article from The Washington Post by Robert E. Hunter (senior adviser at the Rand Corp. and chairman of the Council for a Community of Democracies and U.S. ambassador to NATO from 1993 to 1998 ) that will inform you of the impediments the CD faces:
Five years ago a new group of nations was created: the Community of Democracies. Popularly known as the CD, it was a response to the fact that for the first time in history, most countries have some form of representative government. Meanwhile, others are struggling to establish democratic government or simply are not trying.
Then-Secretary of State Madeleine Albright invented the CD, put together a group of 10 democratic countries from five continents and invited the rest of the democratic world to an inaugural meeting in Warsaw. A second meeting was held in Seoul at the end of 2002. Santiago, Chile, hosted the third session in April, this time with a full role for the nongovernmental organizations that are a major engine of democratic change.
But from the start, the Community of Democracies has faced impediments. Critics argue that it will compete with the United Nations, which is supposed to be the world body dealing not just with peace and security but also the betterment of humankind. In reality, the United Nations' positive work in this area is too often blocked by national leaders who fear that the spread of democracy will undercut their power at home or further isolate them abroad. There have also been laughable developments, such as Libya's being elected chair of the U.N. Commission on Human Rights.
A fight also took place within the Community over who should be invited to join. Which countries are true democracies, which are aspiring, and which are beyond the pale and thus should be excluded? Unfortunately, charges of elitism emerged immediately, and soft hearts -- or soft heads -- have permitted membership for such countries as Russia (slipping fast by any standard of democracy) and Egypt (now, however, relegated to CD "observer" status).
Of course, it's true that the Community of Democracies should not just be a club of the saved. A critical reason for its existence is for its members to provide tangible assistance -- and political pressure -- to countries that are on the road to democratic reforms. At the Santiago meeting, the Hungarian government unveiled the creation of a new Democracy Transition Center, based in Budapest, to gather best practices and seasoned practitioners of the post-Cold War arts of building democratic institutions out of the wreckage of authoritarian systems.
Given the added emphasis in the past few years on fostering representative governments -- as in Central Europe, the Balkans, Georgia with its Rose Revolution and Ukraine with its Orange uprising -- the Community of Democracies should naturally be supported by all of the Northern Hemisphere's democratic states. Unfortunately, it isn't.
At the Santiago meeting, the only Western European foreign minister taking part was from Spain, Chile's historical partner. He joined Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice -- but only three other foreign ministers from elsewhere in Europe. This absenteeism no doubt represents some European sniffing at yet another international grouping; even more, it reflects the Community's provenance -- what several Europeans have judged to be its "Made in America" label. These governments should grow up. They need to separate the worth of the Community of Democracies from whatever problems they may have with the U.S. role in bringing it into being -- or with the U.S. emphasis on democracy in the Middle East.
These Europeans will have a fresh opportunity -- indeed, a responsibility -- when the Community meets next, in Bamako, Mali, two years from now. There is no question that Mali will need help in bringing off such a demanding conference, and France, Mali's closest Western partner, has a lot to do. But so do the rest of the world's democracies. Indeed, they can show that there will be substantial rewards for countries that risk building free institutions despite wretched economic conditions. They can do this by giving tangible support to a poor nation whose pursuit of democracy shows courage, especially in a democracy-starved part of the world.
A "Project Mali" -- well funded and focused on precise needs and opportunities -- should be a central goal of the CD's members before the Bamako meeting. This is a concrete test of whether the Community of Democracies will meet the hopes of its founders or just fade away like too many other well-intended ventures.
Original Blog
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R.J. Rummel is a Professor Emeritus of Political Science. He has published twenty-four nonfiction books (one that received an award for being among the most referenced), four novels, and about 100 peer-reviewed professional articles; has received the Susan Strange Award of the International Studies Association in 1999 for having intellectually most challenged the field; and in 2003 was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Conflict Processes Section, American Political Science Association. He was a 1996 Nobel Peace Prize finalist.
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