http://www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,,1434183,00.html
For weeks a western chorus has been celebrating a new dawn of Middle Eastern freedom, allegedly triggered by the Iraq war. Tony Blair hailed a “ripple of change”, encouraged by the US and Britain, that was bringing democracy to benighted Muslim lands.
First the Palestinians, then the Iraqis have finally had a chance to choose their leaders, it is said, courtesy of western intervention, while dictatorships such as Egypt and Saudi Arabia are democratising under American pressure. And then in Lebanon, as if on cue, last month’s assassination of the former prime minister triggered a wave of street protests against Syria’s military presence that brought down the pro-Damascus government in short order. At last there was a democratic “cedar revolution” to match the US-backed Ukrainian “orange revolution” and a photogenic display of people power to bolster George Bush’s insistence that the region is with him. “Freedom will prevail in Lebanon”, Bush declared this week, promising anti-Syrian protesters that the US is “on your side”. The foreign secretary, Jack Straw, is expected to join the cheerleaders for Arab democracy in a speech today and warn the left not to defend the status quo because of anti-Americanism. The first decisive rebuff to this fairy tale of spin was delivered in Beirut on Tuesday, when at least 500,000 – some reports said it was more like a million – demonstrators took to the streets to show solidarity with embattled Syria and reject US and European interference in Lebanon. Mobilised by Hizbullah, the Shia Islamist movement, their numbers dwarfed the nearby anti-Syrian protesters by perhaps 10 to one; and while the well-heeled Beiruti jeunesse dor