{"id":394,"date":"2006-05-08T14:23:40","date_gmt":"2006-05-08T18:23:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.prosebeforehos.com\/international-relations\/05\/08\/victims-of-their-own-vote\/index.html"},"modified":"2012-12-26T21:52:10","modified_gmt":"2012-12-27T02:52:10","slug":"victims-of-their-own-vote","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.prosebeforehos.com\/international-relations\/05\/08\/victims-of-their-own-vote\/","title":{"rendered":"Victims of Their Own Vote"},"content":{"rendered":"
In an ideal world, economic sanctions against a country culpable of having a malicious leader or government promote internal grassroots change. The short version scenario is those responsible for the existence of sanctions, such as Saddam Hussein during the 1990’s or Hamas currently in Palestine, will be ‘starved’ out of office by being unable to provide basic amenities to its constituency. The idea is that food, medicine, and jobs will be so uncertain that public desperation will facilitate regime change, either peaceful or violent.<\/p>\n
However, idealism falls on its heels as the opposite often occurs: the Regime is not seen as the harbinger of poverty, but the victim of it. In the end, extreme poverty fosters a counter-productive extremist reaction in citizens: a disdain for those carrying out sanctions and sympathy for the government, consequently consolidating power instead of destabilizing it.<\/p>\n
The current situation in Palestine reflects this reality. Hamas<\/a> has existed as a militant Islamic organization since 1987 and recently won democratic elections in Palestine. The accepted but ill-perceived position in the West, perpetuated by pro-Israeli Think Tanks such as the Washington Institute<\/a> (for evidence, read this report following the Palestinian elections<\/a>), is that a terrorist organization was elected for being terrorist. In reality, Hamas was elected in a primarily two-party state (Fatah being the other legitimate party), not for it’s positions towards Israel, but for not being corrupt and hopefully being able to provide basic services Fatah failed to provide.<\/p>\n