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Politics : Don't Blame Me, I Voted For Kerry -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: ChinuSFO who wrote (49214)9/19/2004 12:05:45 PM
From: RichnorthRespond to of 81568
 
19 July 2004

What's Wrong with the Arab World

By Gwynne Dyer

It was just a random statistic, but a telling one: only 300 books
were translated into Arabic last year. That is about one foreign title per
million Arabs. For comparison's sake, Greece translated 1,500
foreign-language books, or about one hundred and fifty titles per million
Greeks. Why is the Arab world so far behind, not only in this but in
practically all the arts and sciences?

The first-order answer is poverty and lack of education: almost
half of Arabic-speaking women are illiterate. But the Arab world used to
be the most literate part of the planet; what went wrong? Tyranny and
economic failure, obviously. But why is tyranny such a problem in the Arab
world? That brings us to the nub of the matter.

In a speech in November, 2003, US President George W. Bush
revisited his familiar refrain about how the West has to remake the Arab
world in its own image in order to stop the terrorism: "Sixty years of
Western nations excusing and accommodating the lack of freedom in the
Middle East did nothing to make us safe....because in the long run,
stability cannot be purchased at the expense of liberty" -- as if the Arab
world had wilfully chosen to be ruled by these corrupt and incompetent
tyrannies.

But the West didn't just 'excuse and accommodate' these regimes.
It created them, in order to protect its own interests -- and it spent the
latter half of the twentieth century keeping them in power for the same
reason.

It was Britain that carved the kingdom of Jordan out of the old
Ottoman province of Syria after the First World War and put the Hashemite
ruling family on the throne that it still occupies. France similarly
carved Lebanon out of Syria in order to create a loyal Christian-majority
state that controlled most of the Syrian coastline -- and when time and a
higher Muslim birth-rate eventually led to a revolt against the Maronite
Christian stranglehold on power in Lebanon in 1958, US troops were sent in
to restore it. The Lebanese civil war of 1975-90, tangled though it was,
was basically a continuation of that struggle.

Britain also imposed a Hashemite monarchy on Iraq after 1918, and
deliberately perpetuated the political monopoly of the Sunni minority that
it had inherited from Turkish rule. As Gertrude Bell, an archaeologist and
political adviser in the British administration in Baghdad, put it: "I
don't for a moment doubt that the final authority must be in the hands of
the Sunnis, in spite of their numerical inferiority, otherwise you'll have
a mujtahid-run, theocratic state, which is the very devil." When the Iraqi
monarchy was finally overthrown in 1958 and the Baath Party won the
struggle that followed, the CIA gave the Iraqi Baathists the names of all
the senior members of the Iraqi Communist Party (then the main political
vehicle of the Shias) so they could be liquidated.

It was Britain that turned the traditional sheikhdoms in the Gulf
into separate little sovereign states and absolute monarchies, carving
Kuwait out of Iraq in the process. (Saudi Arabia, however, was a joint
Anglo-US project.) The British Foreign Office welcomed the Egyptian
generals' overthrow of King Farouk and the destruction of the country's old
nationalist political parties, failing to foresee that Gamal Abdul Nasser
would eventually take over the Suez Canal. When he did, it conspired with
France and Israel to attack Egypt in a failed attempt to overthrow him.

Once Nasser died and was succeeded by generals more willing to play
along with the West -- Anwar Sadat, and now Hosni Mubarak -- Egypt became
Washington's favourite Arab state: to help these thinly disguised
dictators to hang on to power, Egypt has ranked among the top three
recipients of US foreign aid almost every year for the past
quarter-century. And so it goes.

Britain welcomed the coup by Colonel Gadafy in Libya in 1969,
mistakenly seeing him as a malleable young man who could serve the West's
purposes. The United States and France both supported the old dictator
Bourbuiga in Tunisia, and still back his successor Ben Ali today. They
always backed the Moroccan monarchy no matter how repressive it became, and
they both gave unquestioning support to the Algerian generals who cancelled
the elections of 1991 -- nor did they ever waver in their support through
the savage insurgency unleashed by the suppression of the elections that
killed an estimated 120,000 Algerians over the next ten years.

'Excuse and accommodate'? The West created the modern Middle East,
from its rotten regimes down to its ridiculous borders, and it did so with
contemptuous disregard for the wishes of the local people. It is indeed a
problem that most Arab governments are corrupt autocracies that breed
hatred and despair in their own people, which then fuels terrorism against
the West, but it was the West that created the problem -- and invading Iraq
won't solve it.

If the US really wants to foster Arab democracy, it might try
making all that aid to Egypt conditional on prompt democratic reforms. But
I wouldn't hold my breath.

gwynnedyer.com



To: ChinuSFO who wrote (49214)9/19/2004 12:09:13 PM
From: RichnorthRespond to of 81568
 
Message 20541188