NBC News reports: Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, when asked if he believes the Middle East would be better today if Moammar Gadhafi of Libya and Saddam Hussein of Iraq were still in power, responded, “It’s not even a contest.”
He related the situations in both of those countries with what is currently happening in Syria and seemed to endorse a stronger President Bashar Assad, even while admitting that he is “probably a bad guy.”
“You can make the case, if you look at Libya, look at what we did there — it’s a mess — if you look at Saddam Hussein with Iraq, look what we did there — it’s a mess — it’s [Syria] going to be same thing,” the real estate mogul said. [Continue reading…]
This is a point of view that appeals to a lot of liberals and peace activists these days, but it begs at least two questions:
How sustainable is stability when it derives from political oppression?
And what is the long-term price of torture?
Without exception, authoritarian regimes across the Middle East have relied on the same techniques for suppressing political opposition: torture.
Torture has the virtue of silencing critics without turning them into martyrs.
The streets can remain quiet when the screams of those having their fingernails ripped out are muffled by heavy prison doors.
But torture doesn’t just scar bodies — it scars minds, feeding a desire for vengeance that has inspired many a terrorist.
Is this what peace and stability really looks like?
Maybe the real lesson of the last decade has not been that regime change is itself such a terrible idea, but rather that the methods employed to achieve that goal have been worse than useless.
The issue is not one of intervention vs non-intervention but rather a question of what might actually lead to the desired goal.
The insular perspective of those who posture as realist defenders of national interest, suggests that it’s none of our business what happens within the borders of other states, but the reality is that sooner or later the misery of every dysfunctional state will spill out across its borders.