The word democracy derives from the greek demos which means people and CRATOS, power.
In Iraq, democracy exists and the government was elected by the people at a time when the country was plunged into a tunnel of endless terror. Here, a phrase expressed by the former Russian leader Mikhail Gorbachev
" I do not know that valid elections have been held in conditions of war or military occupation. E 'in exactly these conditions that the Iraqi elections have been held is considered valid (or even a triumph of democracy) is an offense to democracy and what it lacks common sense. "
should be recalled that ' influx of Iraqi citizens at the polls was very low: about fifteen million d' eligible, only eight million people expressed their vote. L ' former country of Saddam Hussein has therefore its own democratically elected parliament, but can not fight terrorism that is destroying every day and not the civilian population. Foreign forces, composed especially from the U.S. and British soldiers, unable to counter the ' escalation of barbarism that continue to occur from April
of two thousand and three at the hands of Islamic fundamentalist groups. The scenario that emerges from the territory of Iraq is a war that pits the Western-Catholic world, the Arab-Islamic fundamentalism.
that this war has a new face, semi-unknown. The soldiers of the international coalition led by the United States faces an enemy that is not recognizable, easily identifiable and can be anywhere: the ' man in a row the bakery, the ' car parked at ' corner of a street, fake cops or firefighters. This is what has destabilized the ' infant Iraqi state, with the people defenseless place between ' anvil and hammer. A significant detail for ' outcome of the war in Iraq is the great availability of men in both factions, which unfortunately will prolong the fighting and bloodshed.
Call to Jihad (holy war), flow into the country of ' ex Rais fighters from Pakistan, the ' Afghanistan, Somalia, by ' Saudi Arabia, Yemen and other Muslim countries.
Currently, it is difficult to define ' Iraq a democratic country.
L ' anarchy and destruction, unfortunately, appear now as then, the day of the liberation of Baghdad.
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