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Cal Thomas: Will things change for the better in Libya?

  • Published Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011, at 12:09 a.m.
  • Updated Wednesday, Oct. 26, 2011, at 5:22 a.m.

Forgive me if I don't join the U.S. State Department, American officials and world leaders in their euphoric "Hallelujah Chorus" celebrating the demise of Libya's Moammar Gadhafi. Oh, I'm happy he's dead, but I have as much faith that things will change for the better in Libya as I do in the Great Pumpkin rising from the pumpkin patch on Halloween night (sorry, Linus).

"Gadhafi's Death Ushers in New Era," read the headline in Friday's usually sober Wall Street Journal. "West Hails a Turning Point . . . ," read the subhead. The question is, or should be: A turning to what?

As Richard Boudreaux sensibly wrote in the Journal, Gadhafi "leaves a nation torn by war, devoid of civic institutions and difficult to govern." What can be built on that rubble when Libyans have no history of practicing any of the values the West holds dear? No functional nation can rise when it rests on such a weak foundation.

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has dropped an additional $11 million on Libya ($135 million since the uprising began). It's a safe bet much of it will go down the rat hole of corruption, as our money has in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan.

We have been assured by various sources throughout the misnamed "Arab Spring" that these revolutionaries are genuine democrats, who want free elections and will guarantee at least some rights (if not equal ones) for women, religious minorities and perhaps even political opponents. But the attacks by Muslims on Coptic Christians and their churches in Egypt ought to be a warning sign that an Egyptian (and Libyan) version of America is unlikely to bloom.

Turkey was supposed to be the shining light of 21st-century Islam, a beacon to the rest of the Muslim world. Instead, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been turning more and more to Islam's conservative wing while rebuffing Israel and behaving in ways not befitting a U.S. ally or member of NATO.

Afghanistan isn't turning out as many had hoped. The State Department reports "there is not a single public Christian church left in Afghanistan," the last one having been razed in March 2010. In March 2011, a Congressional Research Service report showed that Afghanistan has cost American taxpayers more than $440 billion (and counting) and 1,700 lives (and counting), and the country is as intolerant of any faith other than Islam as when it was run by the Taliban. This is progress?

If real progress is to be made in Libya toward representative democracy, women's rights, religious pluralism, economic stability and diplomatic cooperation with the West, the first step must be to rewrite the National Transitional Council's draft constitution. Article 1 tells us all where the rebel leadership wants to take the country: "Islam is the religion of the state and the principal source of legislation is Islamic Jurisprudence (Shariah)."

If Libya's new leaders approve a constitution without that clause, keep the Muslim Brotherhood at bay and turn toward the West for more than economic aid, embracing the most fundamental of human rights, I will move from pessimism to guarded optimism. Confidence isn't warranted when a headline in the London Daily Telegraph said, "Interim (Libyan) ruler unveils more radical than expected plans for Islamic law." Than expected?

I remain a skeptic that Libya is capable of heading in a direction that improves the lives of its people, aligns itself with the United States and our interests, and lessens tensions in the region. But I am open to evidence to the contrary, if it's not based on wishful thinking.

Cal Thomas, a columnist with Tribune Media Services, appears in Opinion on Wednesdays.

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