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US democracy promotion in the Arab Middle East since 11 September 2001: a critique
Authors:KATERINA DALACOURA
Affiliation:Lecturer in International Relations at the London School of Economics and Political Science. She is the author of Islam, liberalism and human rights: implications for international relations;(2003) and Engagement or coercion? Weighing western human rights policies towards Turkey, Iran and Egypt (2003). She is currently working on a book about Islamist terrorism and the democratic deficit in the Middle East.
Abstract:Promoting democracy in the Middle East has been a key foreign policy objective of the Bush administration since n September 2001. Democratizing the Arab world, in particular, is seen as an important instrument in the ‘war on terror’. To help democratize the Arab Middle East, the US initiated a number of policies which, it claims, have encouraged reform. But what has really been the impact of US initiatives? This article examines the implementation of US democracy promotion policies across the Arab region, and in particular Arab countries, and argues that it has had mixed results. The article suggests three reasons why this is so. First, democracy is part of a wider set of US interests and concerns with which it is frequently in contradiction. Second, the Bush administration conceives democracy as a panacea: it overlooks the problems its implementation may cause and lacks clear ideas about achieving this implementation. Third, democracy promotion policies have limited outcomes because neither a politically neutral nor a more interventionist approach can initiate a reform process if it is not already underway for domestic reasons. On the basis of the three critiques, the article concludes with recommendations for US policy.
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