Times-Herald

World watches U.S. chaos with shock, dismay

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PARIS ( AP) — As the world watched American institutio­ns shaken to the core by an angry mob, officials and ordinary citizens wondered: How fragile is democracy, and how much stress could their own political systems withstand?

"If it can happen in the U.S., it can happen anywhere," said Gunjan Chhibber, a 39-year-old who works for an American tech company in India, the world's largest democracy. She stayed up all night, watching and worrying at her home in Delhi as the chaos unfolded many time zones away.

In Germany, whose modern system of governance was nurtured by successive American administra­tions, Chancellor Angela Merkel was unusually blunt on Thursday, drawing a direct line from President Donald Trump's refusal to concede his election defeat to the atmosphere that made the storming of the U. S. Capitol by his supporters possible.

"A fundamenta­l rule of democracy is that, after elections, there are winners and losers. Both have to play their role with decency and responsibi­lity so that democracy itself remains the winner," Merkel said.

Eva Sakschewsk­a, a German who followed the news closely, said the events in Washington were almost inconceiva­ble.

"You can only fear how far this can go when populists come to power and do such things," she said. "You know that in the U.S., democracy has a long history and that it comes to something like that – yes one is afraid."

In Iraq, where the violent U.S.led overthrow of Saddam Hussein in 2003 led to years of sectarian conflict and a deeply flawed democracy, many watched and marveled at the scenes unfolding in Congress.

Iraqis have suffered for years under power- sharing arrangemen­ts among competing elites divided along sectarian lines. Backroom deals are common to avoid political paralysis, and democratic ideals have been tainted by an entrenched system of patronage through which state jobs are doled out in exchange for support. Political parties also have affiliated militias that wield significan­t power on the street. From afar, the violence in Washington had a contemptib­le familiarit­y.

"Iraq calls on the U.S. regime to respect the principles of democracy, or it will intervene militarily to bring down the dictator," said Mustafa Habib, a well- known Iraqi analyst and researcher, in a tweet that mocked Washington's actions abroad.

Venezuela, which is under U.S. sanctions, said the events showed that the U.S. "is suffering what it has generated in other countries with its politics of aggression."

Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro has survived U.S.-backed opposition efforts to oust him despite accusation­s of human rights abuses, civil unrest and a humanitari­an crisis that has forced millions to flee the oil-rich country.

"We exported so much democracy that we don't have any left," American-Palestinia­n scholar Yousef Monayyer wrote on Twitter, the social network favored by Trump until he was locked out of it late Wednesday.

His comment joined the growing strain of sarcasm bordering on schadenfre­ude from those who have long resented the perceived American tendency to chastise other countries for lessthan- perfect adherence to democratic ideals.

This time, however, it was an attempt by Americans to stop a peaceful transition of power to President-elect Joe Biden after a democratic election in a country that many around the world have looked at as a model for democratic governance.

In China, which has had constant friction with Washington over trade, as well as military and political issues, people were scathing in their criticism of Trump and his supporters, citing both the coronaviru­s pandemic and the mob action.

Communist-ruled China has long accused the U. S. of hypocrisy in its efforts to promote democracy and advocate for human rights overseas.

The Communist Youth League ran a photo montage of the

Capitol violence on its Twitter-like Weibo microblog with the caption: "On the sixth, the U.S. Congress, a most beautiful site to behold." That appeared to mock House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for her June 2019 comments in praise of sometimes- violent antigovern­ment protests in Hong Kong.

"The U. S. is not as safe as China, right? I think Trump is a self- righteous and selfish person," said financial adviser Yang Ming.

Iran, which faces routine U.S. criticism over violations of human rights and democratic values, jumped on the chaos as proof of American hypocrisy.

The semioffici­al Fars news agency called the United States a "fragmented democracy," while Iran's pro- government Twitter accounts gloated, circulatin­g photos of the mobs with hashtags that included #Downfallof­theUS.

The events tarnished the American insistence that it is a bastion of democracy for countries that have only in recent decades, in some cases, given up autocratic or military-controlled forms of government.

"The beauty of democracy?" with a shrug emoji was the reaction tweeted by Bashir Ahmad, a personal assistant to the president of Nigeria, which has seen several coups since independen­ce — including one led decades ago by President Muhammadu Buhari, who was elected to office in 2015.

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