-- 
-Time flies like the wind. Fruit flies like a banana. Stranger things have -
-happened but none stranger than this. Does your driver's license say Organ
-Donor?Black holes are where God divided by zero. Listen to me! We are all-
-individuals! What if this weren't a hypothetical question? [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Date: Sat, 22 Sep 2001 01:18:50 -0400
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: NY Times.com Article: Hama Rules


This article from NYTimes.com

Hama Rules
September 21, 2001
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN

In February 1982 the secular Syrian government of President
Hafez al-Assad faced a mortal threat from Islamic
extremists, who sought to topple the Assad regime. How did
it respond? President Assad identified the rebellion as
emanating from Syria's fourth-largest city — Hama — and he
literally leveled it, pounding the fundamentalist
neighborhoods with artillery for days. Once the guns fell
silent, he plowed up the rubble and bulldozed it flat, into
vast parking lots. Amnesty International estimated that
10,000 to 25,000 Syrians, mostly civilians, were killed in
the merciless crackdown. Syria has not had a Muslim
extremist problem since.

I visited Hama a few months after it was leveled. The
regime actually wanted Syrians to go see it, to contemplate
Hama's silence and to reflect on its meaning. I wrote
afterward, "The whole town looked as though a tornado had
swept back and forth over it for a week — but this was not
the work of mother nature."

This was "Hama Rules" — the real rules of Middle East
politics — and Hama Rules are no rules at all. I tell this
story not to suggest this should be America's approach. We
can't go around leveling cities. We need to be much more
focused, selective and smart in uprooting the terrorists.

No, I tell this story because it's important that we
understand that Syria, Egypt, Algeria and Tunisia have all
faced Islamist threats and crushed them without mercy or
Miranda rights. Part of the problem America now faces is
actually the fallout from these crackdowns. Three things
happened:

First, once the fundamentalists were crushed by the Arab
states they fled to the last wild, uncontrolled places in
the region — Lebanon's Bekaa Valley and Afghanistan — or to
the freedom of America and Europe.

Second, some Arab regimes, most of which are corrupt
dictatorships afraid of their own people, made a devil's
pact with the fundamentalists. They allowed the Islamists'
domestic supporters to continue raising money, ostensibly
for Muslim welfare groups, and to funnel it to the Osama
bin Ladens — on the condition that the Islamic extremists
not attack these regimes. The Saudis in particular struck
that bargain.

Third, these Arab regimes, feeling defensive about their
Islamic crackdowns, allowed their own press and
intellectuals total freedom to attack America and Israel,
as a way of deflecting criticism from themselves.

As a result, a generation of Muslims and Arabs have been
raised on such distorted views of America that despite the
fact that America gives Egypt $2 billion a year, despite
the fact that America fought for the freedom of Muslims in
Kuwait, Bosnia and Kosovo, and despite the fact that Bill
Clinton met with Yasir Arafat more than with any other
foreign leader, America has been vilified as the biggest
enemy of Islam. And that is one reason that many people in
the Arab-Muslim world today have either applauded the
attack on America or will tell you — with a straight face —
that it was all a C.I.A.-Mossad plot to embarrass the
Muslim world.

We need the moderate Arab states as our partners — but we
don't need only their intelligence. We need them to be
intelligent. I don't expect them to order their press to
say nice things about America or Israel. They are entitled
to their views on both, and both at times deserve
criticism. But what they have never encouraged at all is
for anyone to consistently present an alternative, positive
view of America — even though they were sending their kids
here to be educated. Anyone who did would be immediately
branded a C.I.A. agent.

And while the Arab states have crushed their Islamic
terrorists, they have never confronted them ideologically
and delegitimized their behavior as un-Islamic. Arab and
Muslim Americans are not part of this problem. But they
could be an important part of the solution by engaging in
the debate back in the Arab world, and presenting another
vision of America.

So America's standing in the Arab-Muslim world is now very
low — partly because we have not told our story well,
partly because of policies we have adopted and partly
because inept, barely legitimate Arab leaders have
deliberately deflected domestic criticism of themselves
onto us. The result: We must now fight a war against
terrorists who are crazy and evil but who, it grieves me to
say, reflect the mood in their home countries more than we
might think.

http://www.nytimes.com/2001/09/21/opinion/21FRIE.html?ex=1002093077&ei=1&en=67d76abdacfa9c75
--------- End forwarded message ----------

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