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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PROLIFE who wrote (200263)11/6/2001 2:02:46 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769668
 
The Road Less Traveled May Yield Success for
America
by Salim Muwakkil

Our war on terrorism may miss Osama bin Laden and kill democracy.

At home, the civil liberties that give this democratic republic its unique flavor are
threatened by ominous legislation, the USA Patriot Act, recently signed into law by
President Bush. Abroad, our bombastic diplomacy endangers the prospects of a
democratic future in emerging Islamic countries.

Among other things, this new bill--officially titled the Uniting and Strengthening America by
Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act--gives the
government enhanced powers to conduct secret searches in cases that may be unrelated
to terrorism; leaves the definition of terrorism in the right-wing hands of Atty. Gen. John
Ashcroft; reduces judicial oversight of phone and Internet spying; allows the government to
jail non-citizens based on mere suspicion and more.

Although this panic-driven legislation (referred to by some as the "Ashcroft Police State
Act") has jeopardized many civil liberties, the 1st Amendment has survived. Permit me a
few rude questions and observations before that constitutional protection is withdrawn as
well.

Why are we bombing Afghanistan? None of the terrorists who commandeered the four
aircraft that flew into history on Sept. 11 were Afghani. Nor are Afghanis among the
leaders of the network allegedly responsible for those terrorist attacks

Instead, our reckless assault (we've bombed several civilian enclaves, at least one
mosque, a Red Crescent dispensary and even an International Red Cross building--twice)
is not just killing innocent civilians, it's also making it difficult for so-called Islamic
moderates to win the ideological clash with the radical theocrats. That battle of ideas is
the most important struggle. How can they tout our pluralistic values while our bombs are
shattering the bones of their innocent Muslim brethren?

America's fierce military action in Afghanistan also is having a destabilizing affect on many
other countries; including Pakistan, India, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Nigeria, Malaysia,
Egypt and others. Meanwhile, bin Laden's Al Qaeda network (the alleged perpetrators of
the Sept. 11 terrorist attack) continues operating in places like Hamburg, Paris and
London.

If our mission is to root out and destroy that terrorist network, why are we dropping cluster
bombs on people who have nothing to do with those networks?

Cluster bombs spray dozens of explosive bomblets that have only two purposes: to kill
and maim.

The bomblets that do not explode on impact lie on the ground like de facto land mines.

Instead of helping to win the first war of the 21st Century, our bullying, blundering ways
hark back to the wars of centuries past--when our gunship diplomacy helped squash
independence movements in colonial territories from Asia to Africa, to South and Central
America. Just as our wrongheaded policies once made romantic heroes of groups like
Cambodia's Khmer Rouge, or Peru's Shining Path, our miscues now are burnishing the
image of bin Laden's Al Qaeda and the Taliban.

The millionaire sheik and his defiant protectors have caught the fancy of a Muslim world in
dire need of inspiration. And rather than furthering the long-term goal of ending terrorism,
our policies are fertilizing the ground for a new crop of Islamic radicals.

Since our attacks on Afghanistan have had such perverse effects, why do we persist? We
keep bombing because war creates its own calculus. We're now preoccupied with our
state of hostilities with Central Asia's poorest country, and we've become oblivious to the
context.

The world was on our side after Sept. 11 but by resorting to military might rather than
moral high ground, we've blown the opportunity to parlay that global empathy into a
genuine assault on terrorism. Mounting an aggressive, international police action in several
countries, and focusing more intently on drying up the terrorists' financial sources, could
have ferreted out Al Qaeda more effectively and with much less damage to our tarnished
image.

This would have been the high road; taking it would have deprived Americans the
emotional catharsis of striking back at something, anything. But it would have garnered
America the kind of global respect worthy of a secure superpower. More important, it
would have provided a model worth emulating to those fighting for Islamic democracy.

Unfortunately, we took the road most traveled by the colonial West. The road of arrogance
and military might, where suspending civil liberties and bombing civilians seems
logical--the low road.

The road less traveled is still open.

Salim Muwakkil is a senior editor at In These Times. E-mail: salim4x@aol.com
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