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Home >  Short Publications >  There's No Freedom Gene
There's No Freedom Gene
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By Danielle Pletka
Posted: Monday, March 17, 2008
ARTICLES
New York Times  
Publication Date: March 16, 2008

Danielle Pletka  
Danielle Pletka, vice president for foreign and defense policy studies
 
The mantra of the antiwar left--"Bush lied, people died"--so dominates the debate about the run-up to the Iraq war that it has obscured real issues that deserve examination. After all, for those of us who supported the war, rebutting arguments about weapons of mass destruction has become reflexive. We point to all the United Nations Security Council resolutions, the International Atomic Energy Agency statements, the C.I.A. analyses, the Silberman-Robb report, the Senate Intelligence Committee findings--if we were wrong, we were in good and honest company.

But what about the mistaken assumptions that remain unexamined? Looking back, I felt secure in the knowledge that all who yearn for freedom, once free, would use it well. I was wrong. There is no freedom gene, no inner guide that understands the virtues of civil society, of secret ballots, of political parties. And it turns out that living under Saddam Hussein's tyranny for decades conditioned Iraqis to accept unearned leadership, to embrace sect and tribe over ideas, and to tolerate unbridled corruption.

Some have used Iraq's political immaturity as further proof the war was wrong, as if somehow those less politically evolved don't merit freedoms they are ill equipped to make use of. We would be better served to understand how the free world can foster appreciation of the building blocks of civil society in order to help other victims of tyranny when it is their turn.

Danielle Pletka is the vice president for foreign and defense policy studies at AEI.

Related Links
Related article on freedom in Iraq by Michael A. Ledeen
Related article on political freedom in Iraq by Michael Rubin
AEI Print Index No. 22873


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