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[A-List] Robert Fisk on "war on terrorism"
- To: "A-List (E-mail)" <a-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Subject: [A-List] Robert Fisk on "war on terrorism"
- From: "Keaney Michael" <Michael.Keaney@xxxxxx>
- Date: Wed, 11 Sep 2002 13:13:56 +0300
- Thread-index: AcJZe5gYey0jR8VmEdaZBQAQWtb4aQ==
- Thread-topic: Robert Fisk on "war on terrorism"
One year on: A view from the Middle East
The September 11 attacks were an undoubted outrage. But, says The
Independent's Middle East correspondent, they were an inevitable result
of the great gulf between the Arabs and the US
By Robert Fisk
The Independent, 11 September 2002
September 11 did not change the world. Indeed, for months afterwards, no
one was allowed even to question the motives of the mass murderers. To
point out that they were all Arabs and Muslims was fair enough. But any
attempt to connect these facts to the region they came from - the Middle
East - was treated as a form of subversion; because, of course, to look
too closely at the Middle East would raise disturbing questions about
the region, about our Western policies in those tragic lands, and about
America's relationship with Israel. Yet now, at last, President Bush's
increasingly manic administration has spotted the connection - and is
drawing all the wrong conclusions.
For, as the days and weeks go by, it is becoming increasingly difficult
to recognise in the words of Americans - and in their newspapers - the
Middle East, the region in which I have lived for 26 years. While
cocooned within the usual assurances that Islam is one of the world's
great religions and that the United States is only against "terrorists",
not Muslims, a brutal and cruel fate is being concocted for Arabs, a
world in which more than a score of nations are being fingered as
"terrorists" or "haters of democracy" or "kernels of evil". Richard
Armitage, the US Deputy Secretary of State, last week decided to include
the Lebanese Hizbollah. With a vague, though unspecific, reference to
the 291 American servicemen killed in the suicide bombing of the US
Marine base in Beirut in 1982, he announced that "they're on the list,
their time will come, there's no question about it. They have a blood
debt to us...".
List? Is that what it is now? A list as unending as Mr Bush's so-called
"war on terror"? Does Hizbollah come above al-Qa'ida on the list these
days? Or after Iraq? Or maybe after Iran? "They have a blood debt to us"
is a remark as frightening as it is infantile; it suggests that what the
United States is embarking upon, far from being a titanic battle of good
vs evil, is a series of revenge attacks. One wonders what Tony Blair
thinks of all this. Does he, too, have a blood debt owed to him? And
what - a question that is never asked - do Muslims make of this
nonsense?
I have to say that I have yet to meet a Muslim who has expressed
anything but horror about September 11. But I have yet to meet a Muslim
who said they were surprised. Indeed, after so long in the Middle East,
I have to say that I wasn't surprised when, high over the Atlantic, the
pilot of my America-bound plane told his astonished passengers that four
commercial airliners had been crashed into the United States. Stunned by
the awesome nature of the crime, yes. Appalled by the sheer cruelty of
the mass killings, of course. But surprised? For weeks I had been waking
up each morning in Beirut, wondering when the explosion would come. So
had most Arabs I have talked to during the past year. How and when the
explosion would take place, they had no idea - but that the detonation
would occur was never in question. And in a part of the world so steeped
in blood, it was perhaps understandable that both the intellectual and
the public response to September 11 was somewhat less emotional than in
the rest of the planet.
For example, if you talk to a Palestinian in Lebanon about the September
massacre, he will assume you are referring to the slaughter, at the
hands of Israel's militia allies, of 1,700 Palestinians in Beirut in
September of 1982. Just as Chileans, when hearing the phrase "September
11" - as that fine Jewish writer Ariel Dorfman pointed out - will think
of 11 September 1973, when an American-supported coup d'état led to
the overthrow of the Allende government and the deaths of thousands of
Chileans. Talk to Syrians about a massacre and they will think first of
all - though they will not say the words - of the killing of up to
20,000 Syrians in the Islamist uprising at Hama. Talk about massacres to
the Kurds and they will tell you about Halabja; to the Iranians and they
will tell you about Khorramshahr; to the Algerians and they will think
of Bentalha and a whole series of other village atrocities that have
cost the lives of 150,000 Algerians.
The truth is that the Arabs - like Chileans and other people far from
the new centre of total world power - are used to mass killing. They
know what war is like, and quite a number of Lebanese asked me in the
days after September 11 - our September 11, that is - if George Bush
really did think America was at war. They weren't doubting the nature of
the attacks. They were just wondering if the US President knew what a
real war was like. In Lebanon, you have to remember, 150,000 men, women
and children were killed in 16 years; 17,500 of them - almost six times
the total of dead of September 11, and almost all of them civilians -
were killed in just the summer of 1982, during Israel's bloody invasion
of their little country, an invasion to which the US had given a green
light.
And in many cases, of course, the dead - particularly in Lebanon, and
ever more frequently in the Israeli-occupied territories - are being
killed by American weapons. In the Palestinian town of Beit Jala, for
example, almost all the missiles fired into Palestinian houses were made
by the Boeing company. Only in the Arab world has a terrible irony been
noted: that the very same company that proudly made those weapons - "all
for one and one for all" is the logo for Boeing's Hellfire missile -
also produced the airliners that were used to attack the United States.
Having endured the company's weapons, Arabs turned their airplanes into
weapons as well.
It does not excuse the September 11 killers their hideous crime against
humanity to record that in the Middle East, you do often hear the
thought expressed that now the US knows what it is to suffer. It's not
intended to suggest that the United States deserved such horrors; merely
a faint hope that Americans will now understand how much others have
suffered in the Middle East over the years. I have to say, of course,
that this is not the lesson that Americans are in any mood to learn.
Indeed, one of the most extraordinary - and patently absurd - elements
of post-September 11 America is the way in which the Bush administration
has steadily transformed a hunt for international criminals into a
biblical struggle against the Devil incarnate. The Devil started off
with a beard and a propensity to live in Afghan caves. Then it turned
out that he wore a military beret and had a hankering for poison gas and
weapons of mass destruction. And by last week, when Richard Armitage was
claiming that Hizbollah may be the "A-team of terrorists" - al-Qa'ida
being demoted to the "B-team" - the Devil had apparently moved residence
from Baghdad to Beirut. Add to all this Iran and the non-Muslim Dear
Leader who lives in North Korea and really does have nuclear weapons -
which is why we will not bomb him - and a very odd picture of the world
emerges. In general, however, that world, however distorted, is a Muslim
world.
Now, along with this transformation has come a whole set of policies
intended to show the superiority of our Western civilisation - centred
on the need for the Arab world to enjoy "democracy". It isn't the first
time that the US has threatened the Arabs with democracy, but it's a
dodgy project for both parties: first, because the Arabs don't have much
democracy; second, because quite a lot of Arabs would like a bit of it;
and third, because the countries where they would like this precious
commodity include Saudi Arabia, Egypt and other regimes that the
Americans would like to protect rather than destroy with democratic
experiments. The Palestinians, President Bush has told us, must have a
democracy. The Iraqis must have a democracy. Iran must have a democracy.
But not, it seems, Saudi Arabia, Jordan, Egypt, Syria and the rest.
Naturally, all these ambitious projects have set off a good deal of
discussion in the Arab world - perhaps one of the few fruits of
September 11 that hasn't yet turned sour.
A recent study in the United States - by Pippa Norris at Harvard and
Ronald Inglehart of the University of Michigan - demonstrated
convincingly that Samuel Huntington's grotesquely overrated "clash of
civilisations" is a load of old baloney. Muslims, the study discovered,
were as keen on democracy as Westerners - there presumably being no
Christians left - and in some cases even more enthusiastic than
Americans and others. The differences between the two emerged on social
issues; on homosexuality, women's rights, abortion and divorce. Norris
and Inglehart concluded that it would be a gross simplification to
suggest that Muslims and Westerners hold fundamentally different
political values.
Over the past few weeks, Arab intellectuals have been adding their own
gloss to this, especially in Egypt. They have been challenging
Huntington. Egyptians and Moroccans and even Saudis have been trying to
make a cultural defence of Arabism, rejecting the idea of
"globalisation" - a word I hate but which turns up in Arabic as awalameh
(literally "world inclusivity") - and the notion that to be for
globalisation is to be pro-Western and to be against it is to be against
development. But development is not democracy, and the question remains:
why is there no serious democracy in the Arab world? Although Ayatollah
Khomeini created the theological machinery to emasculate Iranian social
democracy, Iran's elections, and the repeated victories of President
Mohammad Khatami, were undoubtedly fair; Mr Bush's remarks about how he
wants to "bring democracy to Iran" are thus off course.
But it is the Arabs who have never developed a modern political state.
If they had, might September 11 have been avoided? This was certainly an
initial Bush suggestion; the suicide killers, he informed the world, had
attacked America because they "hated democracy". The trouble is that the
19 murderers wouldn't have known what democracy was if they had woken up
in bed with it. But let's not avoid the question: why only police states
and torture chambers in the Arab world?
A historian might go back centuries. When the Crusaders reached the
Middle East in the 11th century, it was the Arabs who were the
scientists; the Westerners - the "Franj" - were the political and
technological numbskulls. And when the Arabs did develop a kind of
social order under the remnants of the Abbasids in medieval Spain, in
the Andalusia of El Cid, the Arabs - along with their Christian and
Jewish brothers and sisters - experienced something like a cultural
renaissance. In the Middle East, however, the Arabs felt they were under
pressure from the West - from Western military prowess and economic
power - and went on to the defensive. To question your caliph - or, even
worse, to advance in theological philosophy - was a form of subversion,
even treachery. When the enemy is at the gates, you don't question
authority. Rather like the Americans after September 11 - when to seek
the motives for the massacres was regarded as something akin to a
thought crime - any intellectual enquiry was suppressed. The Western
powers did much the same to the Arabs after the 1914-18 war. They
chopped up the Ottoman empire, sprinkled dictators and kings across the
Middle East, and then - in Egypt and Lebanon, for example - locked up
anyone exercising their democratic opposition to the regime. If the
opposition was not going to gain political power democratically... well,
it would stage a coup d'état. And this has largely been the fate of
the Middle East since: a series of coups - rather than revolutions on
the Iranian model - which had to be backed up with armies and secret
policemen and torture chambers.
To a patriarchal society - and to one in which there had been no
theological development comparable to the European Renaissance - was
added our own Western determination to support undemocratic regimes. If
we had democracy in the Middle East, the people who live there might not
do what we want. So we supported the kings and princes and generals who
did our bidding, unless they suddenly nationalised the Suez Canal, set
off bombs in Berlin discos or invaded Kuwait, in which case we bombed
them. Not by chance has Osama bin Laden raked over these historical
coals. He wants the downfall of the Saudi regime - how he must have
loved the Rand corporation's lecturer who called Saudi Arabia the
"kernel of evil" - and he wants the downfall of the pro-Western Arab
dictators.
Amid the twisted rhetoric now coming out of Washington - a linguistic
barrage sounding more and more like the authentic voice of bin Laden -
it is becoming ever more difficult to believe that Mr Bush is planning
any kind of democracy in Iraq. Nor in "Palestine". After all, Yasser
Arafat was not rejected because of his failure to create a democracy; he
was rejected because he didn't do the job of a dictator well enough. He
failed to create law and order in the small portions of land awarded to
him in return for his putative good offices.
But something much bigger is going on today. Almost every Arab nation is
being lined up by the United States, eagerly encouraged by Israel.
Palestine must have "regime change"; Iraq must have "regime change";
Iran - most recently accused, without any proof, of shipping al-Qa'ida
gold to Sudan - must have democracy; Saudi Arabia is a "kernel of evil";
Syria is now to be sanctioned for "supporting terrorism"; Lebanon is
accused of harbouring al-Qa'ida members - a patent untruth, but one that
is already finding its way into The New York Times ; and Jordan may have
to serve as a launch pad for an Iraqi invasion (which, possibly, would
mean goodbye to our plucky little king). The United States ends extra
financial support for Egypt because it locks up an American Egyptian for
stating the truth - that Egyptian elections are a fraud. What, Arabs are
asking themselves, are the Americans up to? Are they planning to reshape
the map of the Middle East? Is this to be another exercise in colonial
planning, akin to the one the British and French wrought after the First
World War? Are we planning to topple all the Arab regimes?
In other words, are we now trying to turn Huntington's third-rate book
into a success story? Are we actually now in the process of starting a
clash of civilisations? Never before have Muslims and Westerners been so
polarised, their conflicts so sharpened - and Arab hopes so fraudulently
raised. We are no more planning to give those Arabs "democracy" than we
planned to honour our promise of independence at the end of the 1914-18
war. What we want to do is to bring them back under our firm control, to
ensure their loyalty. If the House of Saud is collapsing of its own
volition, the Americans seem to be saying, then let it collapse. If
Jordan's King Abdullah won't play ball on the Iraqi invasion plans,
what's he worth anyway? In the Arab press, there is a slow but growing
suspicion that "regime change" might turn out to be Middle East change.
But let's remember two things; that the killers of September 11were
Arabs. And they were Muslims. And the Arab world has held no debate
about this. There have been plenty of stories to the contrary: that the
19 murderers were working for the Americans or the Israelis; that
hundreds of American Jews were warned not to go to work on the day of
the attack; even that the planes were remotely controlled and had no
pilots at all. This childish and sometimes pernicious rubbish is widely
believed in parts of the Middle East. Anything to duck the blame, to
avoid the truth.
And it's a strange thing that is happening now. The Americans want the
world to know that the killers were Arabs. But they don't want to
discuss the tragedy of the region they came from. The Arabs, on the
other hand, do want to discuss their tragedy - but wish to deny the Arab
identity of the killers. The Americans have created a totally false
image of the Arab world, peopling it with beasts and tyrants. The Arabs
have adopted an almost equally absurd view of the US, believing its
promises of "democracy" but failing to grasp the degree of anger many
Americans still feel over the attacks.
Yet still there are double standards at work here. George Bush can
rightly condemn the killing of Israeli university students as making him
"mad", but blithely brush off the slaughter of Palestinian children by a
bomb dropped from a US-made Israeli plane as "heavy handed". Yet it's
not just the pitiful remarks of President Bush, but the double standards
of whole peoples. Here's what I mean. Today, 11 September, our
newspapers and our television screens are filled with the baleful images
of those two towers and their biblical descent. We will remember and
honour the thousands who died. But in just five days' time, Palestinians
will remember their September massacre of 1982. Will a single candle be
lit for them in the West? Will there be a single memorial service? Will
a single American newspaper dare to recall this atrocity? Will a single
British newspaper commemorate the 20th anniversary of these mass
killings of 1,700 innocents? Do I even need to give the answer?
- Thread context:
- [A-List] France: military spending increase, (continued)
- [A-List] US imperialism: Sudan,
Keaney Michael Wed 11 Sep 2002, 10:27 GMT
- [A-List] Europe/US rivalry: trade wars,
Keaney Michael Wed 11 Sep 2002, 10:23 GMT
- [A-List] US imperialism: a Clintonian view,
Keaney Michael Wed 11 Sep 2002, 10:21 GMT
- [A-List] Robert Fisk on "war on terrorism",
Keaney Michael Wed 11 Sep 2002, 10:13 GMT
- [A-List] UK state: trade unions fall into line,
Keaney Michael Wed 11 Sep 2002, 09:46 GMT
- [A-List] UK state: trade unions,
Keaney Michael Wed 11 Sep 2002, 09:42 GMT
- [A-List] US state: ruling class split,
Keaney Michael Wed 11 Sep 2002, 09:35 GMT
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