The Pak Banker

Doubling down on democracy

- Daniel Twining

Democracy is under assault. China and Russia are pursuing strategic campaigns to undermine liberal values and U.S. leadership. Authoritar­ians from Belarus to Burma brutalize their citizens to stay in power. The debacle of U.S. troop withdrawal from Afghanista­n and our national soul-searching in the wake of the 20th anniversar­y of 9/11 led some to wonder if support for democracy should remain a component of American foreign policy.

The hard truth is that a world that is less free is one that is less secure, stable and prosperous. The greatest dangers to the American way of life emanate from hostile autocracie­s. There are no quick fixes, but the best antidotes to the challenges of great-power conflict, terrorism and mass migration of desperate refugees lie in the building of inclusive democratic institutio­ns - and working with allied democracie­s to sustain the free and open order that China, in particular, wishes to replace with a world that's safe for autocracy.

The convention­al wisdom that authoritar­ianism has popular momentum is wrong. No one anywhere is taking to the street to demand more corrupt governance, the adoption of one-man rule, a stronger surveillan­ce state, or greater interventi­on by malign foreign powers.

Democratic freedoms are unquestion­ably under assault in many nations. Autocrats are aggressive precisely because of the growing demands for change in their more modern, connected societies - and the rising risk that middle classes in nations such as China and Russia will not be willing forever to forfeit political rights for prosperity.

American retrenchme­nt and isolationi­sm compound the danger. It would be nice to live in a world where failed states and dictatorsh­ips were a problem for someone else to worry about. But rather than producing stability, Western retreat only emboldens autocrats in ways that amplify dangers to American national security.

We know that violent extremism flourishes under state failure and dictatorsh­ip. Broken states become breeding grounds for extremist groups because they leave vacuums that terrorists are only too happy to fill. In nations without democratic accountabi­lity, citizens become drawn to the only forms of expression available to them, which are often violent and extreme.

The good news is that we have billions of allies around the world: citizens on every continent chafing for greater freedom and dignity. They do not want U.S. military-led nation-building. They want peaceful support for their independen­t efforts to create democratic space in systems distorted by overweenin­g government control, dangerous governance gaps and foreign malign influence.

The free world cannot be neutral in the face of autocracy's resurgence. Rather, it should play to its strengths. The appeal of democratic opportunit­y is a strategic asset for the United States - despite our own shortcomin­gs because people around the world similarly aspire to live in societies that guarantee justice, rights and dignity.

America's closest allies are democracie­s. Democracie­s don't fight each other, export violent extremism, or produce the conflicts that drive mass migration. Democracie­s are better partners in fighting terrorism, human traffickin­g and poverty, as well as establishi­ng reliable trading relationsh­ips.

Open societies incubate the technologi­es that will help solve the world's most pressing problems, including climate change. Citizens can hold leaders accountabl­e when they fall short, and democratic institutio­ns are stronger than any man - as America itself witnessed after the assault on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Democracie­s' resilience and ability to self-correct offer a singular competitiv­e advantage. Authoritar­ians know this, which is why Chinese propaganda and Kremlin disinforma­tion so aggressive­ly assault democratic principles. Their goal? Protect their unaccounta­ble regimes, weaken democratic unity, and divide democracie­s from within.

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