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Posts Tagged ‘Israel’

I share Eugene Robinson’s well-articulated concern in his most recent Washington Post column.  The numbers are stark: America’s share of total world defense spending is 46.5%.  Second place goes to China at a meager 6.6%.  In an age of withering economic hardship at home and growing deficits and debt, why do we continue to subsidize a global stability that many other nations quietly take advantage of, cutting deals for precious natural resources- in Iraq, in Afghanistan- while American soldiers die and extremists cite occupations to recruit for their attacks on American soil?  Because, Eugene, as you well know, it’s a business.  A profitable business with a powerful constituency of congressmen, corporations, and military brass who in the end don’t care as much about lives, treasure, and America’s global standing.  Not when it comes to revenue, re-election, and the welfare of their own military families.  This is why we continue to sell arms to Saudi Arabia and Pakistan, even though we know these two countries are largely responsible for the operational and ideological underpinnings of the jihadist movement that wants to destroy America.  This is why we offer a Netanyahu government who we know has no intention of negotiating in good faith with its Palestinian counterparts the bribe of new fighter jets, even as our military leadership says our unconditional support for Israel leads directly to the loss of American lives.

Sadly, the prospect of someone else’s death cannot compete with the needs of the living.  America’s defense spending is not a subsidy to the world as much as it’s a subsidy to the American economy and political system, much like other government programs such as unemployment insurance and Medicare that Mr. Robinson has advocated for in the past.  The American enlisted soldier- largely low-income and with fewer educational and professional opportunities than higher income Americans- is the primary beneficiary, although, just like Medicare, corporations (insurance companies) and higher income individuals (doctors) also benefit.  Pick a line item in the federal budget and it is easy to find a domestic constituency behind it with their hand out.

Of course, defense spending is different than any domestic program for many of the reasons Mr. Robinson articulates.  Domestic programs usually don’t violently kill Americans and foreigners.  They also don’t have such a direct, measurable effect on our international standing.  In the foreign policy arena as with everything else, we must begin to learn how to do more with less.  One obvious option is to convince other nations to do more so we can do less.  So far, our record on this has been poor.  Time after time- in Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan, to name only a few- our “partners” have gotten a free ride at our expense even while they undermine our goals to boot.  There is no use hollering about their duplicity on opinion pages.  Every nation has interests that are often at odds with ours even as we find ourselves on the same side of the battle. Pakistan has legitimate concerns about a larger, hostile India that will make it forever reluctant to entirely give up the extremist proxy groups like the Taliban and Lashkar i Taiba that it uses to prevent Indian encirclement.  President Karzai has to think about the day when America will abandon its Afghan adventure, as it has done so precipitously in the past.  Anti-American, pro-nationalist, pro-Pashtun statements keep local constituencies in his favor for when that day comes.  Such are the complexities and paradoxes that make international relations a challenge.  We are better off understanding them and working through them instead of against them.

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Muslim communities across America can only cringe once again at the latest spate of news: package bombs from Yemen bound for Chicago area synagogues; a plot to simultaneously bomb multiple subway stations in the DC metro area.  In both cases, the main culprits are American citizens of Muslim faith and heritage: in Yemen, Anwar Al Awlaki, a wily American born cleric, has become the spiritual and operational leader of Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) and one of the most wanted terrorist operatives on the planet; and Farooque Ahmad, a 34 year-old naturalized American of Pakistani birth caught in an FBI sting operation in Virginia.  Since last year over 60 Americans have been charged or convicted of terrorism, many of them born or converted Muslims with jihadist sympathies.  What is going on?

The Ground Zero mosque episode, the Koran book burning, an embattled president in an election year who spent time as a boy in Indonesia and whose father happened to be Muslim.  As if America Muslims needed another home-spun sound-byte to reduce their profile from bad to worse in the eyes of fellow Americans.  As they have understandably done over the past decade, many American Muslims continue to keep their heads down, practice a quiet faith, pay their taxes, and avoid any overtly political act or public forum.

Is that the answer, though?  Complacency and quietism?  Should American Muslims remain silent for fear of retaliation or humiliation?  Is it better just to not attract attention and quietly disavow the extremists who have perverted Islam for their own ends on the one side, avoiding the ignorant, xenophobic Americans (and Europeans) who blame Islam for all society’s ills on the other?  Is that the extent of the Muslim responsibility when it comes to the future of their own faith and civilization?  Keep your head down, grin and bear it?

Granted, there are other forces that have been at work here for decades that have little to do with religion and that most Americans are completely ignorant of when passing judgement on Islam and Muslims.  A string of secular tyrants in the Middle East, supported with American treasure and arms, torturing and radicalizing their own countrymen and limiting space for moderate forms of political Islam in their own societies.   An American funded jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan that, along with Saudi money and Pakistani organization, fueled the rise of Al Qaeda and the Taliban.  Unconditional American financing and support for an Israeli occupation of Palestinian lands that has gone beyond its 40th year, an occupation that plays into the hands of extremists bent on killing innocents at any cost.

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Hussein was not a dirty word for most American Muslims who watched the first black man inaugurated president two years ago.  The president’s middle name represented a certain hope, not that our new head of state was a closet Muslim, for we all knew better, and, given many of our experiences, we were not advocates for that anyway.  Most of us had to admit that the worst leaders in the Muslim world, both past and present, were and are themselves Muslims.  No, the quiet hope was that this president would understand the complexity and nuance of our particular civilization and history better because he had spent time there, not as an ambassador or a dignitary in a bubble, but as an ordinary young man interacting with the common people.

The beginning was auspicious.   A moving speech in Cairo that lauded Muslim civilization’s past accomplishments but was firm about its deficiencies in the modern era.  A pledge to close a Guatanamo facility that filled the recruiting rolls of Al Qaeda.  Careful deliberations on Iraq and Afghanistan that solidified the long-term goal of ending inconclusive conventional operations in favor of a more nuanced strategy of counter-terror, capacity building and engagement.  The Iranian people were reminded of their great history and that a place was still available for them within the international community, despite the naked duplicity of their leadership.  Israel was forcefully prodded to stop building homes on land the whole world had considered illegally occupied now for over 40 years, an occupation that America’s own military leadership had admitted was a severe liability in the fight against extremism.  Renewed financial support was extended to regimes in Afghanistan and Pakistan, but not without conditions, not if they were to continue their corrupt, opaque ways.

Sadly, all of these good beginnings appear to be unraveling today, and Obama I is starting to look more and more like Bush I & II, as powerful, vested interests reassert themselves.  An extended hand across civilizations- in Cairo, towards Tehran- has given way to embarrassing bigotry over mosques and flaming Korans at home.  Meanwhile, Israeli home building begins in ernest once again in occupied Palestine, along with an added snub- an obligatory loyalty oath to Israel as a Jewish state for Israeli’s Arab citizens, courtesy of the racist wing of the Netanyahu government.  The underlying message to the Muslim masses- whipped up by state sponsored and extremist propaganda machines from Cairo to Qatar: we will lecture you about modernity and secularism at our leisure, but at home and with our allies, anything goes.  This hurts us.

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This past weekend I hopped on Interstate 95 and rubbernecked my way along stimulus-inspired construction lanes down to colonial Williamsburg, a time-warp back to the days of British empire in America and its discontents.  A passion-play called “Revolutionary City” was captivating a crowd of tourists along the former colonial capital’s cobblestone avenues, complete with costumed redcoats and town criers on chargers.  American myth-making was unfolding before our eyes: the rights of man, the tyranny of a distant monarch, tea parties and taxation without representation.  Powder-wigged gentlemen made lofty speeches and minutemen- the irregulars of our own insurgency against our motherland some 240 years ago- were called into action.  After visiting a shoemaker, a printer, and the Governor’s Palace, I drove 13 miles down to the battlefield of Yorktown, where 5,000 French troops and the French navy made it possible for Washington to declare victory over Lord Cornwalis.

The French had their own reasons for helping us in our hour of need.  Britain was a long-time rival, and any insurrection in America would clearly benefit French global power.  Ironically, King Louis’ support of American self-determination presaged the revolution that would engulf his own rule, and all of Europe, shortly thereafter.   In hindsight, perhaps no leader in our collective past endured such a swing in judgment- on the right side of history one moment, only to be relegated to its dustbin in short succession.

As the U.S. troop drawdown in Iraq reaches a milestone while the surge peaks in Afghanistan, we might ask ourselves how the American interventions of the early 21st century will be judged decades from now.  After a trillion dollars spent (Stiglitz and Bilmes will tell you it’s more like $3 trillion), will we end up on the right side of history?

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I won’t attempt to decipher the swirling debate surrounding the manufactured controversy of Park 51, the “mosque” (actually, cultural center modeled on the Jewish YMCA at 92nd Street) “at Ground Zero” (actually, several blocks away, like the other mosques already in the area.).  All heat and very little light, it’s clear the only thing this debate has energized is our own xenophobia, mob rule, and perhaps a political base or two.  The defenders of common sense have been spirited, particularly Michael Bloomberg, Jeffrey Goldberg, Fareed Zakaria, Michael Gerson and President Obama.  The political opportunists have been shameful, particularly Newt Gingrich, Sarah Palin, Charles Krauthammer, and Rick  Lazio.

But for most of the world’s 1.2 billion Muslims, the circus in America is a side show of self-important, ignorant Americans.  Many are fighting a bloody battle to redefine their faith in their own communities around the world.  Zoning rights in lower Manhattan seems trivial in comparison.  Despite all the hype and fanfare about the tectonic rift between the West and the Islamic world, the clash of rival faiths and cultures, the most virulent religious war is being fought between and among Muslims themselves.

America is involved in this fight only peripherally, and then not because we are defending ourselves from an Islamic monolith that seeks to infiltrate and conquer free societies.  On the contrary, for the past 60 years, it is America that has been the aggressor, exploiting and protecting its strategic interests in Muslim lands- namely, our addiction to Middle Eastern oil and our support of client-states like Israel and Pakistan that can project our superpower influence.  More often than not, our meddling has been to the detriment of the cause of freedom in the Muslim world as our policy makers continually opt for the stability of dictators and strong men.

How reality becomes twisted, inverted in fact, in home town America, in the name of fear and victimhood.  Does any sane person believe the Twin Towers would have come down if the Western financed oil boom, and intense American patronage, had not enabled the rise of Saudi Arabia, allowing it to export its homicidal brand of Islam across the Muslim world, spawning the Bin Ladens of the global age?   If men like Ayman Zawahiri are not tortured and radicalized in Egyptian prisons under a staunchly American-backed Mubarak regime, who builds Al Qaeda into an organization capable of striking across oceans?  If America does not pump billions of dollars into an Afghan jihad against the Soviets in the 80s, who has the capability and air of righteous invincibility to declare war on the sole remaining superpower in the 90s?   If American evangelical and Jewish groups do not fund illegal settlements built a stone’s throw from ethnically cleansed Palestinian villages, is there any sympathy or support among ordinary Muslims for the mass murder of innocents on this scale?

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I will not attempt to dissect the spate of reactions and counter-reactions to the Jeffrey Goldberg article on the Iran-Israel conflict in this past week’s Atlantic.  Smarter people who follow this debate every day and have none of Goldberg’s hidden prejudice or agenda have provided some excellent analysis here and here.  I highly recommend this reading for anyone who is truly interested in dispassionately separating out the ground truths of the Iran issue from the sinister ideology masquerading as policy advice that perpetually clouds the beltway’s corridors of power.  And we call ourselves the “rational” West, the “secular-pragmatic” United States, versus the “emotional” East, the “fanatical” Muslim World, where decisions are based on the next world, not this one.

This seems to be the departure point for Goldberg’s one-dimensional caricature of Iran, where millenarian clerics hold sway, old men who have long considered Jews and Christians ritually unclean and a threat to the cohesion of broader Muslim society.   There is indeed this strain of thought in Iran, among a more conservative constituency.  My grandfather was among them for the first part of his life, until he met my Jewish-American mother, until he saw the world changing around him and was forced to change himself.  But to insinuate that this is the only viewpoint or even the dominant one in an Iran whose diverse political culture defies easy classification is perhaps Goldberg’s greatest sin.  It fuels the rush to war much in the same way his writings contributed to a public acceptance of (or acquiescence to) the Iraq debacle.  In both instances the narrative is the same: The Islamic East is a monolith of religious and secular fascists diametrically opposed to the West.  Goldberg fulfills the Al Qaeda wet dream- a civilizational conflict.

The reality is that all nations are full of ignorant people and the politicians who represent them, smearing their anger and vitriol across the airwaves.  Newt Gingrich equates Islam with Nazism.  Avigdor Lieberman, Israel’s foreign minister, believes Israel’s long standing citizens of Arab descent should take a loyalty vote or lose their rights.  Goldberg himself goes into great detail about the influence of Ben Zion Netanyahu, the prime minister’s father, whose past statements can only be classified as racist and warmongering.  Orthodox parties in Israel and Christian coalitions across Europe and America increasingly de-humanize the “Islamic” other, brandishing ancient fears and insecurities.  How much of what Gingrich and Lieberman say are what they truly believe and will act upon and how much is idle pandering to their base of support?  No one knows.  But these pundits and their incendiary words are somehow tolerated, perhaps because of the assumption that there is a difference between actions and rhetoric.

Goldberg’s insinuation is that Iran should be held to a different standard.  We should examine public statements in excruciating detail to determine what Iranian leaders will do next.  Ahmadinejad calls for Israel to vanish (this gets parsed into “annihilation” by the mainstream press) and says that the Palestinians shouldn’t be made to suffer for Europe’s original sin of the Holocaust (this becomes “he denied the Holocaust”).  Rafsanjani says Iran can handle nuclear war better than Israel.  Rezai says the Jews won’t have a home one day.  These are worrisome words.  But they are just words, meant to illicit a reaction, appeal to a base, and provoke a response.

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I don’t usually write about a status update on Facebook, but this one seemed to encapsulate so many of the complexities we deal with when trying to understand the shifting sands of identity in the Middle East.  I haven’t seen or talked to this “friend” in several years, since a few too many drinks and a late-night cigar on Jemayzee Street in Beirut, but his one-liner- “Don’t Touch My Lebanon”-written in French, not Arabic- immediately caught my eye.

As you might have guessed, my friend is Christian Lebanese and like most in that community, often feels more comfortable speaking sophisticated French than his native Arabic.  The Christian communities of Lebanon have in many ways been more attuned to European and Western culture than their fellow Muslim citizens.  Many look to Rome for spiritual guidance, prefer Paris or London as their vacation spots, and welcome a closer relationship with France and even the United States, if only to counter the growing influence of groups such as Hizbullah which have the demographics of the poorer, more traditional Shi’ite communities on their  side.  It is a good bet that my friend and many of his friends and their families fought against Hizbullah and many of the other Muslim militia groups during the Lebanese civil war in the 80s and 90s.  Some of these Lebanese Christian militias, like the Phalange, became allies of Israel when it invaded Lebanon in 1982 to oust the PLO from its bases there.

But my friend was not talking to Hizbullah when he said “Don’t Touch My Lebanon.”  He was talking to Israel.   He was responding to a minor incident several days ago that barely made any of the international news wires- an exchange of gunfire between Israeli and Lebanese troops along their border that left several dead on both sides.   His status update was followed by a more pointed comment by my friend a day later, something to the effect that Israel would think twice about invading Lebanon again ever since their losses in the 2006 war when Hizbullah fought them to a stalemate.  Lebanese politics, always treacherous and byzantine, apparently ends at the border in this instance.  When the nation is threatened, Christian and Muslim adversaries rally around the flag.

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A pair of instances recently reminded me how both sides- the “West” (more specifically, the United States) and the Muslim World- have engaged in so little self-reflection since the events of 9/11.  It is much easier to project outward than to take a hard look at your own society.  Problems are no longer yours when you can successfully argue that they come from some outside force.  For politicians and pundits, the temptation is too great.

This kind of gamesmanship has approached the truly absurd in the Muslim world.  On Friday a Sufi shrine in Lahore, Pakistan was ripped apart by a triple suicide bombing.  As I have written before, Sufism is the lighter side of Islam- a moderate force whose greater tolerance for things like other faiths and female emancipation has angered Muslim extremists.  It’s long standing traditions and practices across the Muslim world are the most direct, organic challenge to those who would spread the lie- that early Islam’s core strength was its angry, unforgiving unity and purity.  Nothing could have been further from the truth.  Islam’s original spread in the 7th and 8th centuries was indeed aided by the sword, but more important in its ascendancy was its acceptance of other cultures, faiths and its rational discourse on everything from trade to science.  The Christian world, caught in an orgy of religious violence, greed and superstition, could not compete.

How far has Muslim civilization fallen?  How completely have the two sides exchanged places, like a pair of reflections in the same mirror?  After the Lahore attack, demonstrations blaming the United States for the carnage raged across Pakistan.  Normally sane people reasoned that extremists wouldn’t have attacked the shrine if the Pakistani government wasn’t in bed with America.  In the rush to anger, the sick individuals who actually planned and executed the operation seemed to have been all but forgotten.

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Gone are those halcyon days in the late 1970s, when Israeli intelligence carefully nurtured to life a fledgling political group that became the Islamic Resistance Movement, or Hamas.  ”What?!”, you say?Yes.  This is the sad historical context conveniently omitted from any recent news article or analysis of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.  Back in the ’70s, the radical Islamic movement now synonymous with terrorism and violence was the perfect creature for Israeli policy makers: it was an organic counter-weight to Israel’s main threat at the time- the secular Palestinian nationalism of the PLO; it divided and weakened Palestinian resistance, turning it inward upon itself; it promoted the uncompromising anti-Western, anti-modern, anti-peace ideology of Islamic fundamentalism, ensuring the status quo of Israeli occupation and expanding settlements.  In short, Hamas was a boon to Israeli efforts to dilute and derail Palestinian self-determination, estranging it from any global sympathy and support.  That is why in the 1970s thru to the 1980s and beyond, Israeli resources and cooperation secretly flowed to Hamas.

Today Hamas is a fierce enemy of the state of Israel.  But it is still very useful.  With the Palestinian leadership divided between Fatah in the West Bank and Hamas in Gaza, there is little prospect of a serious push for peace and normalization.  The Israeli side can always fall back on the argument that no peace deal will be honored in practice anyway as long as Hamas rules even part of the Palestinian territories.  Hence, in the absence of any final agreement, the status quo of growing Israeli settlements and creeping Israeli sovereignty in the Palestine proper prevails.  This is largely the reason why Palestinian elections were allowed to take place in 2006, bringing Hamas to power.  And why the Bush administration collaborated with Israel in 2007, both urging Fatah to try and seize Gaza from Hamas by force.  The Israelis knew the attack would fail, resulting in a further divided and weakened Palestine in no position to negotiate final status.

In light of this background, the brutal Israeli commando raid on the international flotilla attempting to deliver humanitarian aid to Gaza last week makes Machiavellian sense.  A few innocents dead and injured pale in comparison to the long-term costs to Israel if the activists had gotten thru the Israeli blockade. They would have instantly internationalized the plight of the 1.5 million Gazans whose deprivation and suffering have become a cause celebre for many a jihadist interested in killing civilians (preferably Americans).  The homicidal reasoning goes something like this: if America is enabling Israel to slowly squeeze the life out of Palestinian children, well then, how is that different from an underwear bomber on a plane or a car bomb in Times Square?

The Gaza blockade is too important for Israel, not because it weakens Hamas, but because it strengthens it.  Increasingly desperate, isolated and angry Palestinians gravitate towards the radical cause that Hamas espouses.  This self-fulfilling, vicious cycle is one that Israeli leaders have been only too happy to sit back idly and watch take its bloody course for years.  After all, a destitute Gaza and a strong Hamas means a real chance for peace is far off.  And that gives a right-wing Israeli government time to continue the unilateral colonization that will make multiple areas of the West Bank untenable as parts of a future Palestinian state.  It seems Israel’s Hamas policy has not changed much since those heady days in the 1970s, when Israel helped create one of the world’s most potent terrorist organizations.

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Elected in no small part due to the backlash against rash Bush administration misadventures abroad, the incoming Obama team  swore to itself it would pursue a more nuanced, collaborative policy towards Iran.  And from the beginning, the president has acted with considerable restraint, even when the mullahs’ brutality against their own people streamed across the globe for all to see.  Instead, Obama instructed his Iran team to patiently build the case among friends and allies for crippling sanctions against the Iranian regime over its nuclear program.  Gone were the days when America would “go it alone.”  We had learned our lesson in Iraq.  The only way to stop a belligerent nation like Iran was with unified, concerted action by the international community.

And after over a year of concessions in Moscow, political capital spent in Beijing, and multiple arm-twistings at the UN, a draft resolution was finally produced.  Except it didn’t matter anymore, because only the day before the mullahs had agreed with Turkey and Brazil to a uranium swap mirroring the one that was proposed by the U.S. months before.  No one will read the fine print that makes this agreement different- that Iran’s stock of enriched uranium is much larger now than it was when the U.S. deal was proposed, that it can still enrich uranium to its hearts desire, that it can cancel the deal whenever it wants (for example, in reaction to a new UN sanctions resolution).

The mullahs have outmaneuvered the Great Satan once again.  How can a country that spends $10 billion a year on its measly military embarrass the greatest military and economic power the world has ever known?  Well, we haven’t made it that hard for them.

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