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Fwd: Looking backward: Identifying causes

To: "Roadster list" <datsun-roadsters@autox.team.net>
Subject: Fwd: Looking backward: Identifying causes
From: snyler <marc@animalfirm.com>
Date: Mon, 17 Sep 2001 20:42:54 -0500
Here's a bit of international perspective from one of our friends in 
Sweden:
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Before we return to the normal topics of the list,
I would like to look backwards and try to analyse how the present tragedy 
became possible. This might help to identify the way to go beyond 
reprisals.

Since this is about history, (although it would fit in a list
dedicated to the works of Gerald Seymour, such as "Harry's Game")
you can delete this posting from the archive


-First, suicide pilots do not emerge spontaneously.

In a way the terrorism directed against the United States is a hangover 
of 
the cold war.

During this era, USA built up a network of allies abroad and successfully 
isolated the Soviet Union. This network came at a prize.

While *European* countries have reason to be grateful for the US support, 
many US allies in the world -certainly in the Middle East-
were and are repressive military (or feudal) dictatorships, who received 
economic and military support from the US.

In the mind of those who opposed the governments, USA became one with 
those 
repressive regimes.
For instance, Khomeini's hatred for "Great Satan" was founded under the 
rule 
of the Shah of Iran, who regained power after one of the first 
CIA-sponsored 
coups.

The Shah, by the way, successfully exterminated the westernized 
democratic 
opposition.
He tried, and failed, to exterminate the islamic opposition, since this 
had 
much *deeper roots* than the opposition of the small west-influenced 
middle 
class:
this can be seen as a template for the situation in many Middle East 
countries.

(Another of the western allies of the era was the Baath party 
dictatorship 
of Iraq; When the Baath sized power in the sixties,
in competition with the communists, CIA gave the Baath death squads the 
names of suspected communists in the country.
One of the security goons was a young officer named Saddam Hussein.
He and his cronies would enjoy a good "Realpolitik" relation with the 
West, 
until the invasion of Kuweit.)


The Israel-Arab conflict added another dimension of complexity. It is 
partly 
territorial, but increasingly got a religious component.

After the traumatic defeat by Israel 1967, many regarded secular arab 
nationalism as discredited, and turned to religion for answers
(Western parlamentary democracy was not an option under the governments 
of 
the era).

Now that the Soviet Union is gone, the mess remains as a monument to 
Realpolitik.



-Second, massive reprisals *will* backfire.
To understand why, consider what is behind the euphemism
"collateral damage".


The continued sanctions against Iraq a decade after the war did not hurt 
Saddam and his cronies. It *did* hurt the civilian population.

Western sources (not the Iraqi ministry of propaganda)
estimate that as many as half a million children have died of hunger and 
lack of medical supplies!
This is not a factor of ten, but a factor of *hundred* more than the 
number 
of victims of the WTC attack !

While this *in no way justifies* the atrocity in New York or Washington,
it has caused widespread anger among people in the Middle East, even 
among 
those who hate Saddam Hussein, and would like to see him fall.

It seems to them the lives of moslem civilians do not matter to the West 
as 
much as the lives of white anglo-saxon protestants.


Another bungled job:
The bombing of Khartoum by Clinton destroyed not only a pharmaceutical 
factory that may have doubled as a bioweapons factory, it also destroyed 
a 
large part of the medicine supplies in a third world country.

The exact number of dead as a result of medicine shortage will not be 
known; 
The UN considered to make an independent investigation about the claims 
of 
the production of bioweapons, and about the effects of the raid; the US 
represantive vetoed the investigation.

The whole business caused resentment among many countries who otherwise 
supported the US struggle against terrorism; the bombing probably did 
more 
harm than good (also, see comments by Noam Chomsky).


And while 99% of those moslems who resent western policies would *not*
have anything to do with Bin Laden,
or his extreme form of religious and political activism,
the statistical bell curve guarantees that a few thousand
(of a population base of several hundred million)
will be angry enough to be recruited.

In case you think I have an anti-US bias (I do not), consider instead the 
conflict in Northern Ireland.
Every time commando soldiers succeeded in ambushing an IRA group, there 
would be a new wave of recruits for IRA, otnumbering those who had been 
killed. Martyrs were good business for IRA recruiters.


I have no magic political solution that might sort everything out.
Obviously the solutions must be long-term and aimed at defusing conflicts 
in 
general. They must be concerned with improving both living conditions and 
human rights.
This "only" amounts to changing the world, not a matter I can sort out in 
an 
evening before the PC !

Yours

Birger Johansson

UmeB.


_________________________________________________________________
Hmta MSN Explorer kostnadsfritt pB http://explorer.msn.se


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