With
Iraq divided into American, British and Polish controlled zones, we
gather together in Turin at an extraordinary and difficult time.
Whatever our own views on the path leading to the recent Iraq War, it
is time to look forward.
It is
time to assess the new world reality.
The post
Iraq international situation gives an opportunity to look for ways to
promote the cause of democratization, human rights and the global
community to which we are all committed.
Many in
the international community felt uncomfortable with a war without United
Nations sanction.
Demonstrations for peace broke out in the heart of Europe, at times larger
than demonstrations within the Muslim world.
No one
likes war.
No one
likes Repression either.
Western
societies absorb dissent.
Non-Western societies are yet to deal with the challenge of those
victimized, persecuted, imprisoned, tortured and exiled because of their
political views.
This
community of the disaffected and the disenfranchised played a pivotal role
both in Afghanistan and Iraq.
In Kabul
and Baghdad, popular voices of the people were denied political space.
They formed the political front for a war to reclaim their own land.
Countries descend into the darkness of international terrorism and state
terrorism when pluralism is disrupted, when diversity is suppressed, when
one man directs the destiny of millions be it a Mullah Omar or Saddam
Hussain or other dictators.
America's President George Bush justified war claiming:
“Men
and women in every culture need liberty like they need food
and water and air. Everywhere that freedom arrives, humanity
rejoices; and everywhere that freedom stirs, let tyrants fear.”
Post
Iraq, tyrants should fear.
It is
troubling that some of those tyrants still feel little fear. Sadly, some
of them are still close allies of Washington. In the case of Pakistan, a
repressive regime exiles the popular opposition, imprisons dissidents and
rigs elections.
In the
post Iraq world that dawned this April, the words rationalising the Iraq
war can be used to press all nations, and especially Washington, to make
consistent application of democratic principles the essence of
internationalism in this new millennium.
There
were moments in recent history where historic moments were squandered.
When the
moving finger of history writes of the end of the 20th century,
it will write of the international community’s failure to reinforce the
democratic breakthrough that the end of communism brought as the era’s
greatest missed opportunities.
I recall
speaking to European Parliaments, to the Congress of the United States
proclaiming that the era of the dictator was over, that militaries all
over the world had finally returned to their barracks, that democracy was
blooming on every continent.
In
retrospect, I fear it was merely a mirage. The forces of real politic
were waiting to collide with the ideology of democracy.
We
proclaimed a new moral era, but actually constructed an era of moral
relativity. And ladies and gentlemen, selective morality is by its very
definition, immoral.
Our
standards are inconsistent and our policies selective. Those that decry
dictatorship in Burma are silent about tyranny elsewhere. Those decrying
dictatorship in Iraq, stay close to dictators in Pakistan. Many in this
room rightfully demand self-determination in Palestine, but are less vocal
about the rights of the Kashmiri people.
In this
age of moral relativism, political standards vary according to political
expediency and economic imperatives. Democracy for Iraq, but dictatorship
just miles away. Iraqi violations of UN resolutions bring a strong
response. Violations of UN resolutions in the Middle East or in South Asia
draw a less vocal reaction.
We
evaluate national security by hardened borders and tanks and missiles. But
true security is linked to the fight for economic justice that will
liberate nations; true security is linked to the fight against famine and
AIDs; true security means protecting the environment from pollution and
desecration.
No
matter how great and powerful a nation may be, true leadership is more
than military action. It is leading the fight against AIDS, against
hunger, against poverty, against racism, and for women, the fight for
justice.
Ladies
and gentlemen, the post Iraq world situation allows us to focus once again
on the principle of freedom. This time it must be more than rhetoric that
is exploited in pursuit of limited, foreign policy objectives.
I
remember a time when the world walked from Afghanistan after the defeat of
the Soviets in 1989.
The
fundamental mistake was that we were not consistently committed to the
values of freedom, democracy and self-determination that ultimately
undermine terrorism. The result was Taliban dictatorship, Al-Qaeda and
terrorism.
Dictatorship doesn’t constrain fundamentalism or terrorism. It provokes
it. The goal of rational foreign policy must always be to simultaneously
promote stability and to strengthen democratic values.
The
stakes are high. Every war in the South Asian subcontinent from where I
come started when my country was under a military dictator or one of its
civilian surrogates.
I do not
know of a single case when a democratic country has gone to war against
another democratic country.
Dictators are not accountable and do not need a popular mandate behind
their policies.
The
tragedy of Iraq is that Saddam Hussain spurned all offers of a peaceful
transition from his regime to a democratic one. None dared tell him that
he could not win a military war against American technology.
None
dared criticise his flawed strategy of a prolonged guerrilla conflict with
house to house fighting in Iraq’s cities to force Washington into a
ceasefire while he remained in control.
Dictators are cut off from reality by sycophants too scared to tell them
the truth allowing for miscalculations that innocent people pay for in
lives.
Democracies are different. Democratic leaders are accountable before the
Parliament, the Press and the People. Democratic governments must provide
for the public welfare, must provide schools and hospitals, health and
housing. Dictatorships need not. They rely on unaccountable secret
services and are free to divert resources to schemes that parliamentary
scrutiny simply would not permit.
History
has taught us the very hard lesson that when democratic states turn
against democracy, they turn against themselves.
Ladies
and Gentlemen:
The
international press has speculated about Islamabad's support to North
Korea's nuclear program. Islamabad denies the charges.
Even
though Islamabad is a key ally of the US in the war against terrorism,
Pakistani citizens are finger printed and photographed when they visit
America.
Military
dictator General Musharaf promised the world community he would seal the
borders with Afghanistan to prevent fleeing Al Qaeda from slipping into
Pakistan. Yet scores made their way into the country as the recent arrests
by the FBI demonstrate.
Ladies
and Gentlemen:
I
believe a democratic Pakistan is the best guarantee of respect and dignity
for the people of Pakistan. I believe that a democratic Pakistan living by
the rule of law within and without is the best guarantee of the triumph of
moderation and modernity amongst one billion Muslims at the crossroads of
our history.
These
are difficult times. We stand at the crossroads of a new world order. We
witness the dawn of a uni polar world environment where wars can take
place with the coalition of the willing. We witness disunity in the United
Nations Security Council, in NATO, in Europe and in the Muslim world.
We can
remember that the future is in our hands. As the European philosopher
Goethe once wrote, “Freedom must be reinvented in every generation.”
Unipolarism can lead to unilateralism. As power shifts to new paradigms
the challenge is to find ways where the voices of the rest of the world
community can also be heard effectively.
This is
our turn to reinvent freedom.
And we
shall prevail.
Thank
you ladies and gentlemen.