Bombs, bullets, ballots (WASHINGTON TIMES COMMENTARY) By Oliver North 01/30/05)
Source: http://www.washingtontimes.com/commentary/20050129-095133-9374r.htm
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By Tuesday, it will have happened twice in less than four months,
though rarer than a solar eclipse, a shooting star or a volcano
eruption. It should be celebrated as a magnificent, historic event,
but no: Today´s Iraqi election, like the October election in
Afghanistan signifying the birth of a new democracy and the first
vote of a long-oppressed people is presented by the media as a danger
to be avoided at all costs.
For months, the so-called mainstream media have struggled to depict
the Iraqi elections as a fools´ errand foisted on the Iraqis by
George Bush. When I was in London earlier this week, the BBC and many
European newspapers predicted an "invalid outcome" because "the Sunni
population is boycotting the vote." On Tuesday, Senate opponents of
the president´s Iraq policy lined up behind former Ku Klux Klansman
Robert Byrd and Teddy "the swimmer" Kennedy to pillory Condoleezza
Rice —and declare Iraq to be "a quagmire ... a total failure."
But despite a pre-election poll of 33,000 Iraqis by the Arabic paper
Asharq Al-Awsat, in which 72.4 percent said they intend to vote —
including 33 percent in the heavily Sunni central provinces — the
U.S. media continue denigrating the process.
"Is a 50 or 60 percent turnout enough?" reporters have skeptically
asked the White House, State Department and every U.S. and Iraqi
official they can find in Baghdad. But when 50 percent of American
voters went to the polls in November, it was considered a "historic"
turnout.
All this misses the point. Though the final tally won´t be known for
days, today´s election is already a success — a "grand moment in
Iraqi history," as the president predicted in his Wednesday news
conference.
It is a remarkable accomplishment because:
(1) The terrorists tried so hard to stop it and failed.
(2) More than 17,000 candidates were willing to put their lives on
the line, vying for 270 seats in the first freely elected National
Assembly in the long history of Mesopotamia.
(3) Finally so many Iraqi women braved bombs, bullets, threats and
intimidation to go to the polls.
Last October, whole Afghan families walked miles, skirting minefields
and defying threats from Taliban thugs, just to vote. Little noted by
my "media colleagues" with cameras at the ready to capture the
carnage — was the amazing moment when Moqadasa Sidiqi, a 19-year-old
woman, cast the first ballot in Afghanistan´s history. A woman cast
the first ballot.
And though you wouldn´t know it from the media criticism and
commentary, the feminine factor in the Iraqi elections is far more
important than whether the voter is a Sunni or a Shi´ite.
By law, one-third of the new National Assembly members must be women.
Women are about to transform Iraq, just as they are transforming
Afghanistan.
Last summer, when I interviewed the elected governor of Iraq´s
largest province, Al Anbar, in the heart of the Sunni triangle, he
told me, "Women voting will change everything. No woman who carries a
child for 9 months wants that child to grow up to be a suicide
terrorist. They want the politicians to give their children something
to live for, not die for — and we will have to do it."
That judgment is echoed by most secular and religious leaders in
Iraq. The National Assembly elected today will not only name a
president, two deputy presidents, a prime minister and a Cabinet, it
must also start drafting a new constitution due by Aug. 15. That
constitution will then be submitted to a popular referendum — a
second free election by mid-October.
This new Iraqi constitution will become the law of the land if
affirmed by a majority of the voters nationwide. Approval of the
constitution will yield yet a third free election on Dec. 15, 2005,
to elect a new government.
All this seems to have escaped the attention of the president´s
critics in our media; as have the television ads produced by pro-
democracy organizations to encourage Iraqi voting.
In one ad, an elderly man is confronted on the street by a group of
masked, armed thugs. The man is soon joined by a handful of his
neighbors, then more, until the mass of people greatly outnumber the
terrorists, who set off running from the crowd of ordinary, unarmed
but courageous Iraqis. The voice-over says, "On Jan. 30, we meet our
destiny and our duty. We are not alone, and we are not afraid. Our
strength is in our unity; together we will work and together
prevail." No ad like this could possibly run under Saddam´s rule.
Terrorist-in-chief in Iraq, Abu Musab Zarqawi, in a statement showing
just how desperate the insurgents are to prevent democracy from
taking root, condemned these elections: "We have declared a fierce
war on this evil principle of democracy and those who follow this
wrong ideology." He went on to brand anyone who took part as
an "infidel."
President Bush, in his Inaugural address, said, "By our efforts, we
have lit a fire as well — a fire in the minds of men. It warms those
who feel its power, it burns those who fight its progress, and one
day this untamed fire of freedom will reach the darkest corners of
our world."
That fire is blazing in Iraq. And it may soon spread to some of those
other dark corners of the Middle East.
Oliver North is a nationally syndicated columnist and founder and
honorary chairman of Freedom Alliance. (Copyright 2005 News World
Communications, Inc. 01/30/05)
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