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"The US...is hated more than ever, 
and more now from an Arab than 
an Islamic standpoint."  
"In the collision to come, the Arabs risk further 
blows to all those ideals and aspirations - 
independence, dignity, the unity and 
collective purpose of the greater Arab 'nation' - 
...after centuries of foreign conquest and control..." 
  

'America wants to wage war on all of us' 
'Regime change' seen as new term for old enemy: colonisation 
By David Hirst in Cairo

The Guardian - UK - 5 September:    There is no better place to take the pulse 
of Arab and Muslim sentiment than Cairo, hub of the two great movements which 
swept the region in recent times, the pan-Arab secular nationalism of which 
President Nasser was the champion, and the "political Islam" which came into its 
own with Nasserism's failure and decline. 
Today, from the air-conditioned thinktanks on the banks of the Nile to the 
sweltering alleyways of the splendid but dilapidated mediaeval city, the 
preoccupation with the two things that seem most fateful for the future - the 
Israeli-Palestinian struggle and US plans for a possible war against Iraq - is 
overwhelming. 
"Bin Laden may have lost a lot of his appeal," says Dia Rashwan, an expert on 
Islamist fundamentalism, "but that doesn't mean the US isn't hated. It is, more 
than ever, and more now from an Arab than an Islamic standpoint." 
In a workshop in the City of the Dead, Muhammad Ahmad carries on the ancient, 
glass-blowing craft of his forefathers on a day when, even without the heat of 
his furnace, the temperature stands at 45C. "What makes you think that Bin Laden 
really did it?" he asks, giving voice to a still widespread popular suspicion. 
"Bush is just using him to put us down." He adds: "The future is dark." 
Indeed, it is much darker for most Arabs than it might have appeared in the 
immediate aftermath of that apocalyptic atrocity in New York and Washington, 
because, one year on, it seems clearer to them in its consequences. It is a 
momentous double crisis, an external and an internal one. Long maturing, the two 
are inextricably intertwined. Osama bin Laden brought both to a head. 
As they see it, the US's post-September 11 "war on terror" now boils down to an 
assault on themselves. For in the Bush universe of good versus evil, it is 
essentially they, with Iran thrown in, who are the evil ones. In the collision 
to come, the Arabs risk further blows to all those ideals and aspirations - 
independence, dignity, the unity and collective purpose of the greater   Arab 
"nation" - which, after centuries of foreign conquest and control, the 
pan-Arabism of Nasser so triumphantly, if defectively, embodied. 
Internally they are ill-equipped to meet the external challenge, racked as they 
are by all manner of social, economic, cultural and institutional sicknesses. 
These, the US says, are the very conditions which threw up Bin Ladenism. Few 
Arab opinion-makers would dispute it, or doubt their societies' desperate need 
of root-and-branch reform, ushering in democracy, human rights, accountability. 
There is no more compelling measure of that than the UN's newly released Arab 
human development report. It describes a region which has fallen behind all 
others, including sub-Saharan Africa, in most of the main indices of progress 
and development; whose 280 million inhabitants, despite vast oil wealth, have a 
lower GNP than Spain; whose annual translation of foreign books is one-fifth of 
Greece'. 
A prime cause of this backwardness, say the report's Arab authors, is that the 
peoples of the region are the world's least free, with the lowest levels of 
popular participation in government. "Those who wonder why Afghanistan became a 
lure for some young Arabs and Muslims," wrote Jordanian columnist Yasser 
Abu-Hilala, "need only read this report, which explains the phenomenon of 
alienation in our societies and shows how those who feel they have no stake in 
them can turn to violence." 
Yet most Arab regimes have ignored this damning verdict. "The fact is," says 
Nader Fergany, the report's Egyptian lead author, "that governments that were 
repressive in the first place have in the past year become more so. They have 
not learned the lesson of September 11 - but neither has the US." 
In what measure are foreigners, or Arabs themselves, responsible for their 
condition? Bin Laden has greatly sharpened that perennial Arab debate. The 
west's sins are deemed to have begun with the European carve-up of the region 
after the first world war and the creation of Israel; these betrayals and 
humiliations continued with US-led support of repressive, corrupt or reactionary 
regimes enlisted as bulwarks against communism or accomplices in the quest for 
an impossible, because unjust, settlement of the Palestinian conflict. 
"For us," says Muhammad Said, a columnist at Egypt's leading newspaper, 
al-Ahram, "the west always preferred control to democracy. Now 90% of the 
problem flows from the Arab-Israel conflict, that continuous reminder of our 
colonised past." 
Never before, in Arab eyes, has the US acted so blatantly in favour of its 
Israeli protege, and for domestic reasons - the triple alliance of Jewish lobby, 
neo-conservative ideologues and the Christian fundamentalist right - which take 
little or no stock of rights or wrongs on the ground. 
For Makram Muhammad Ahmad, editor of al-Musawar newspaper and confidant of 
President Mubarak, this amounts to a sickness liable to be at least as 
catastrophic as the Arabs' own. "It's terrible that a weak and ignorant man like 
Bush can be used this way - you might expect it from third world countries, but 
from the world's only superpower!" 
In the immediate aftermath of 9/11, Arabs say, the US did - with its talk of a 
Palestinian state - seem to have learned something; it began to distance itself 
from those cumulative policies of which Bin Ladenism was the ultimate, evil 
fruit. 
"Palestine is not only crucial in itself," says Muhammad Sid-Ahmad, another 
al-Ahram commentator, "it is symbolic of US intentions everywhere. Through 
Palestine, you can now see that the US just doesn't care to look for root causes 
anywhere. It has adopted the Israeli definition of terror, and that shapes its 
policies for the whole region." 
These policies are now so detested that they have raised the potential threat to 
US interests to unprecedented levels. To retain its Middle East dominance it has 
to invest resources commensurate with the threat. It can no longer rely on 
friendly proxies, like Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Egypt, for they themselves will 
be undermined by their connivance with it, nor on the mere "containment" of 
enemies such as Saddam Hussein. 
So the Arab world, says Said, now risks being "subjected to direct or indirect 
colonialism". And the very "backwardness of the Arab order makes the pursuit of 
such imperial designs possible". For Arab societies are seen as "incapable of 
modernising on their own, thus providing a natural gateway to colonisation". 
Such neo-colonialism involves "regime change" by force for those the US deems 
beyond the pale, and the imposition of reforms, from the school curriculum to 
their position on Palestine, on those who remain within it. Of the two explicit 
candidates for regime change, Iraq now has priority over the Palestinians. 
Indeed Iraq has emerged as the key arena where the battle between good and evil 
will be joined. 
The idea, says Said, is to "terminate" the Palestinian question by war at the 
expense of the Arabs as a national group. With the overthrow of President 
Saddam, the US hopes to make this richly endowed country the linchpin of a whole 
new pro-American geopolitical order. Witnessing such a demonstration of US will 
and power other regimes would have to bend to US purposes or suffer the same 
fate, be they such traditional, "terrorist-sponsoring" opponents as Syria, or 
traditional friends, such as Saudi Arabia, held to spawn terrorism through their 
misrule or a general "culture" of religious extremism. 
For individual Gulf states that do not submit, says Said, "There will be nothing 
to stop regimes from being changed or political successions being manipulated in 
the way the English used to do in the 19th century." 
There is a wall of almost universal Arab hostility to a US assault on Iraq. But 
there is also a single, very telling breach in it. However fractious, 
opportunist or incompetent some, at least, of the exiled US-backed Iraqi 
opposition may be, they cannot be dismissed as unrepresentative of the Iraqi 
people, who - unlike other Arabs - suffer directly beneath President Saddam's 
monstrous tyranny. 
It is an embarrassing moral dilemma. The US hawks have tried in vain to 
establish President Saddam's complicity with Bin Laden and 9/11. But that 
failure cannot disguise another, much deeper affinity between the two: for after 
Bin Laden what more disastrous personification of   the internal Arab sickness 
that all right-thinking Arabs yearn to cure than the Iraqi dictator, what 
country in more dire need of democratic reform than Iraq? 
Egyptian analyst Wahid Abdul-Meguid laments that Arab objections to a US assault 
"amount to solidarity with Saddam against his own people". If it were just the 
Arab regimes it would not be so bad, but the truth is that the objections also 
come from Arabs who oppose their own, albeit less brutally despotic regimes, for 
essentially the same reasons as the Iraqis do theirs. 
If Arabs really believed that, in removing President Saddam, the US were bent on 
promoting a democratic order in his place, they would be readier to join the 
Iraqi opposition in tolerating such a war at least. But they don't. They point 
out that even if the expected campaign does, in principle, incorporate some 
reformist good intentions, so did those earlier western subjugations of the 
region from whose consequences they suffer till today. 
They will see it, primarily, as an act of aggression aimed not just at Iraq, but 
at the whole Arab world; and what will make it supremely intolerable is that it 
will be done on behalf of, Israel, whose acquisition of a large arsenal of 
weapons of mass destruction seems to be as permissible as theirs is an 
abomination. 
Their fear is not only that Israel will become - with the possible exception of 
Britain - the only other country to join a US onslaught, but that Ariel Sharon 
will exploit it to kill two birds with one stone. He will combine the completion 
of the Israeli "war on terror" with another great breakthrough in Zionism's 
still unfinished grand design, another mass expulsion of Palestinians of which 
much of the Israeli right has long dreamed. 
Destroying President Saddam, like destroying the Taliban, could be one thing, 
though not nearly so simple; managing what comes after could be another. For 
most Arabs, the overall conditions, largely of Washington's own, now 
unprecedentedly partisan pro-Israeli making, in which the US embarks on such an 
enterprise would seem to all but guarantee its failure - and a consequent 
success for Bin Laden. 
After all, he was always something more than just the crazed, archaic Islamist 
visionary; Iraq, Palestine - and US conduct towards them - always ranked high on 
his anti-colonial, political and nationalist agenda. That is why, says the 
Palestinian commentator Abdul Jabbar Adwan, he now "owes an enormous debt of 
gratitude" to Mr Bush for the "political services" he has rendered him since 
9/11; far outstripping any commercial ones in the days when "the Bushes and the 
bin Ladens" did oil business together. 
The price of failure, in so strategic, complex and volatile a region, would make 
the post-war falterings in Afghanistan pale into insignificance, exacerbating 
both the Arabs' internal crisis and its external consequences. The Arabs 
probably would not be the only ones to pay the price. 
"The US may be preparing a big surprise for the region," warns Lebanese 
commentator Saad Mehio, "but the Middle East may be preparing an equally big one 
for the Americans. At any rate, no one should forget that it has been the most 
renowned source of surprises through the ages." 
  
  

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