Towards a New Middle East
Policy
excerpted from the book
Tinderbox
U.S. Middle East Policy and
the Roots of Terrorism
by Stephen Zunes
Common Courage Press, 2003,
paper
p216
Towards a New Middle East Policy
The United States faces a stark choice
between continuing with its strategy of Pax Americana and building
real peace and security. The first option requires the continued
oppression of large populations, from stateless peoples like the
Palestinians, Sahrawis and Kurds; to those victimized by repressive
allied regimes, like the Saudis and the Egyptians; to those suffering
as a result of American antipathy towards their governments, like
the Iraqis and the Iranians. This will continue to breed an inevitable
hatred by these peoples against those who they believe are responsible
for their suffering. When outlets for redress are systematically
sealed off, whether by occupation armies or dictatorial regimes,
some portion of the oppressed population will almost certainly
respond with terrorism. Acts of terrorism by oppressed Middle
Eastern peoples have been going on for years, long before the
United States became the target in the attacks of September 2001,
striking such countries as Turkey, Lebanon, Israel, Egypt and
Algeria, among others. The propensity for targeted populations
to engage in acts of terror is particularly high when the oppression
they face is itself a form of terrorism, in terms of the large-scale
killings of civilians. Americans cannot expect that those on the
receiving end of state violence will refrain from treating Americans
in a manner similar to how they see themselves as being treated,
particularly as the United States, directly or through allied
governments, brings destruction to their countries and death to
their people.
On the day of the attacks against the
World Trade Center and the Pentagon, CNN decided to repeatedly
show video clips of a small number of Palestinians celebrating.
Though their sentiments represented only a small minority of Palestinians
and other Arabs, these West Bank residents were probably not alone
in the Third World in feeling a perverse sense of satisfaction:
Finally, the United States knows what it is like to lose thousands
of civilians in an act of political violence, getting a taste
of what it has been like for those who have been the victims of
U.S. foreign policy. For such massive loss of civilian lives is
not new to the Palestinians, nor is it to the people of Vietnam,
El Salvador, Nicaragua, Angola, East Timor, Iraq or Lebanon, who
know the feeling all too well, not in small part due to the policies
of the United States. The heart-rending scenes in the days following
the tragedy of anguished New Yorkers holding up pictures of their
missing loved ones bore a striking resemblance to similar scenes
in Latin America during the 1970s and 1980s of the relatives of
los desaparecidos, the thousands of "disappeared," victims
kidnapped and murdered by military regimes backed by the U.S.
government.
While the United States has been responsible,
both directly and indirectly, for inflicting enormous violence
throughout the globe, that can never justify violence against
American civilians. The unfortunate reality, however, is that
such violence is likely to continue unless there is a change in
U.S. policy. In addition to the strong moral imperatives that
have led peace and human rights activists to challenge U.S. policy
over the decades, there is now the additional incentive of self-interest:
bringing about a more enlightened foreign policy is necessary
for national security.
p223
Addressing the Root Causes of Terrorism
Arab nationalism, Marxism, and other ideologies
that have come to the fore in recent decades have failed to free
Islamic countries from unjust political, social and economic systems
or from domination by Western powers. In many respects, political
Islam has filled the resulting vacuum. The embrace of reprehensible
tactics and ideologies by some radical Islamic movements does
not negate the validity of some of the popular concerns that have
given rise to such movements. One need not justify the reasons
to understand them, yet these are concerns that the United States
ignores at its own peril.
"The Arabs," observed Marine
General Anthony Zinni, former head of the U.S. Central Command,
"are a people obsessed with injustice." Only by addressing
the legitimate grievances will there be any hope of stopping the
often-illegitimate methods and extremist ideologies of anti-American
Islamic groups. Otherwise, the United States may find itself dealing
with a series of conflicts that could eclipse the bloody surrogate
Cold War battles that ravaged the Third World in previous decades.
From Afghanistan to Algeria and beyond,
out of great social dislocation caused by war and misguided economic
policies, radical Islamic movements have grown to prominence.
Policies designed to minimize such traumatic dislocation will
be far more successful than military threats if the goal is to
encourage political moderation in Islamic countries. To effectively
challenge the threat from radical Islamic movements, the United
States must shift its focus from simply trying to crush such movements
to pursuing policies that discourage their emergence.
Simply addressing the security aspects
of terrorism, then, as U.S. policy currently does, confronts the
symptoms rather than the cause. The struggle against terrorism
cannot be won until the United States also ceases its pursuit
of policies that have alienated such large segments of the international
community, particularly in the Middle East and elsewhere in the
Third World. The United States is a target of terrorists in large
part due to its perceived arrogance, hypocrisy, and greed. Becoming
a more responsible member of the international community will
go a long way toward making the United States safer and ultimately
stronger. George Semaan, editor of the London-based Arabic publication
Al Hayatt, observed that the United States cannot root out terrorism
"unless it changes its attitude as to how to develop and
defend its interests by building a network of relations based
on respect of the interests of others, particularly the weak and
those whose rights have been denied." The tactics of terrorists
can never be justified, whatever their grievances. Yet it is crucial
to recognize that the most effective weapon in the war against
terrorism would be to take measures that would lessen the likelihood
for the United States and its citizens to become targets. This
means changing policies that victimize vulnerable populations
in ways that currently result in them holding the United States
responsible for their suffering and thus becoming easy recruits
for anti-American terrorists. For example, bin Laden's key grievances-U.S.
support for the Israeli occupation, the ongoing U.S. military
presence on the Arabian peninsula, the humanitarian consequences
of the sanctions against Iraq, and support for corrupt Arab dictatorships-have
resonance among the majority of the world's Muslims. Very few
Muslims support terrorism of any kind, yet as long as there is
such widespread hostility to U.S. Middle East policy, it will
not be difficult for terrorists to find willing recruits.
Changing U.S. policy will not satisfy
bin Laden and other extremists, nor should it. The United States
should never change any policy for the sake of appeasing terrorists.
However, changing policies that are already questionable on moral
or legal grounds becomes all the more crucial when doing so could
also reduce the threat from terrorism, since it will substantially
reduce their potential following and-by extension-their ability
to do damage.
The popularity of the United States in
the Middle East is directly related to the perceived fairness
of its policies towards the region. Support for the United States
was highest in late 1956 when the Eisenhower Administration forced
Israel, Great Britain, and France to halt their invasion of Egypt.
Though ultimately motivated by fear of a pro-Soviet backlash in
the Arab world if the United States did otherwise, this seemingly
principled stand in support of international law and the right
of self-determination against the wishes of America's closest
allies won the United States enormous respect throughout the region.
However, in more recent years, as the United States has tried
to enforce its will on the region through militarization and support
for what is widely perceived as repression and injustice, support
for the United States has declined dramatically. This trust can
be restored, but only if the United States shifts its policies
to become more consistent with support for human rights, international
law, sustainable economic development and demilitarization.
p233
Changing U.S. Foreign Policy
It will be hard to change the policies
of the current administration as \ long as the majority of even
such liberal Capitol Hill bastions as the Progressive Caucus and
the Human Rights Caucus support the status quo, as is currently
the case. A widespread assumption is that the key to changing
U.S. government policies is to replace these and other politicians
by electing those interested in change. Supporting candidates
with more enlightened views towards the U.S. role in the world
certainly has its merits. The Green Party-that has a strong platform
in support of peace and human rights in the Middle East-has been
attracting large numbers of disaffected Democrats upset at their
party's right-wing stance. Yet not only is the record of third
parties mixed in terms of changing policies, but history has shown
that it is ultimately less important whom the American electorate
chooses as its political leaders as it is the choices that a well-mobilized
citizenry give them once in office.
For example, the history of U.S. foreign
policy in recent decades has been shaped markedly as a result
of popular demands by large numbers of people putting pressure
on elected officials through Congressional lobbying, legal protests,
civil disobedience, and public education campaigns. For example,
the Democratic Party in 1968 had a platform supporting the Vietnam
War with the incumbent Vice-President Hubert Humphrey, a strong
proponent of the war, as its nominee. By the next presidential
election in 1972, the Democratic Party had a strong anti-war platform
and an outspoken anti-war nominee in Senator George McGovern,
which helped force the Nixon Administration to sign a peace treaty
by January of the following year. There was much more than organizing
people to vote responsible for this change. The four years in
between saw massive anti-war mobilizations with hundreds of thousands
of people protesting in Washington, DC and elsewhere, as well
as large~scale civil disobedience campaigns, widespread draft
resistance, and other forms of opposition.
There are many other examples: In 1980,
Vice-President Walter Mondale and others in the Carter Administration
strongly opposed the call for a freeze in the research, testing,
and development of new nuclear weapons and delivery systems. By
the time he ran for president in 1984, however, Mondale was an
outspoken supporter of the proposed nuclear freeze. In the intervening
four years, the Nuclear Freeze Campaign and disarmament activists
had mobilized grassroots initiatives across the country, including
the massive 1982 protest in New York City. Major arms control
treaties were signed in the ensuing years.
In 1977, Andrew Young-the African-American
clergyman and former aide to Martin Luther King who then served
as President Carter's ambassador to the United Nations-vetoed
a UN Security Council resolution calling for sanctions against
South Africa. By 1986, the Republican-dominated Senate joined
the Democratic-led House of Representatives in overriding a presidential
veto to impose sanctions against the apartheid regime. This dramatic
shift came as a result of the divestment campaigns and other actions
of the anti-apartheid movement that sprung up on college campuses
and elsewhere throughout the country. The imposition of sanctions
proved to be instrumental in the downfall of white minority rule.
In the 1980s, massive protests against
the U.S. military role in Central America forced the United States
to accept the Arias peace plan, which brought an end to the bloody
civil wars and resulted in the establishment of democratic governance
in a region then dominated by repressive military-led regimes.
In the l990s, a popular movement supporting
self-determination for East Timor forced a reluctant Clinton Administration
to cut off military aid to Indonesia, which in turn led to the
withdrawal of Indonesian occupation forces and eventual independence.
The key to changing U.S. Middle East policy,
then, is in building a popular movement comparable to these successful
precedents. So far, the movement has been relatively small compared
to these others. Given what is at stake, this is particularly
tragic.
As with other movements, there are elements
of the far left and others that sometimes fall into rigid ideological
models based upon little empirical information about the conflict
in question, often greatly simplifying complex historical dynamics
and sometimes even buying into bizarre conspiracy theories. In
addition, certain elements from the far right can infect movements
critical of U.S. policy regarding Israel with anti-Semitic ideas.
However, the biggest problem has been the timidity of the peace
and human rights community to become more involved. For example,
it is very unlikely that the scores of liberal members of Congress
who support the bombing of Iraq or military aid to Israeli occupation
forces would continue to do so if faced with the kind of mobilization
that took place opposing U.S. policy in Central America.
Public opinion polls indicating popular
support for President Bush's Middle East policy does not mean
that most Americans actually support the policy. It merely means
that they support what the policy is presented as being. Most
Americans actually believe their government's rhetoric that the
United States supports democracy, international taw, demilitarization,
economic development, and Israeli-Palestinian peace and that U.S.
military involvement is focused solely upon defending the United
States. One of the first challenges for those wishing to change
U.S. policy, then, is to expose the real nature of that policy.
Once that is revealed, support for a new foreign policy can be
mobilized into the kind of popular movement that has forced changes
in foreign policy in the past.
Tinderbox
Index
of Website
Home Page