http://regimechangeiran.blogspot.com/2006/09/us-may-lose-war-on-terror-histo
rian.html
 

Thursday, September 14, 2006

 <http://www.nysun.com/pf.php?id=39539> 

U.S. May Lose War on Terror, <http://www.nysun.com/pf.php?id=39539>
Historian Bernard Lewis Says 

 
Daniel Freedman,  <http://www.nysun.com/pf.php?id=39539> The New York Sun: 
The victor of the war on terror is far from clear, the historian Bernard
Lewis told a Hudson Institute conference.

The British-born professor of Near Eastern studies at Princeton said Monday
that he was "more optimistic about the future of our struggle" in the early
1940s - when the French had capitulated to the Germans, when Stalin was
Hitler's ally, and when America was still neutral - than he is today.

"Hitler would have won under these conditions," Mr. Lewis said, citing
America's inability to clearly define the war on terror and exactly who its
enemy is. The professor, whose vision of the future of the Middle East and
knowledge of Islam has guided President Bush's foreign policy, also cited as
challenges the multilateralism that hamstrings America's ability to fight
the war and the strong political opposition to policies designed to defeat
the enemy, such as detaining terrorists without trial.

During the darkest days of the fight against Nazism, Mr. Lewis said, he "had
no doubt that in the end we would triumph." He does not "have that certitude
now," he said.
<http://regimechangeiran.blogspot.com/2006/09/us-may-lose-war-on-terror-hist
orian.html> READ MORE

Mr. Lewis told the center-right think tank's conference on the United
Nations that he agrees with a former communist dissident and current Israeli
parliamentarian, Natan Sharansky, that the only real solution to defeating
radical Islam is to bring freedom to the Middle East. Either "we free them
or they destroy us," Mr. Lewis said.

The contention, especially popular in diplomatic circles, that Arabs aren't
suited to democracy and that the West's best hope lies with friendly tyrants
shows an ignorance of the Arabs' past and contempt for their present and
future, and is "demonstrably absurd in historical terms," Mr. Lewis said.

Mr. Lewis said a great deal of material exists - from Arabs, from Persians,
and from Turks - that can form the basis for democracies in the region. He
quoted from a 1786 letter to the king's court in France from the French
ambassador to Istanbul explaining why the Ottoman Empire was slow in making
decisions. The ambassador reported that unlike in France, where the king
made a decision and that was it, "here the sultan has to consult" and so it
"takes time to get things done."

Mr. Lewis said he places no hope in the United Nations being part of the
solution. He "first realized the U.N. was hopeless" after the partition of
Palestine, he said. Palestine was a "triviality" compared to the partition
of India that took place a year earlier, in 1947, he added. Millions of
refugees were created and yet India and Pakistan formed a working
relationship and sorted out the problems.

The key difference, Mr. Lewis said, was that "in the partition of India, the
U.N. was not involved. "The United Nations failed to act after the Arab
states invaded Palestine, and then treated Jewish and Arab refugees
differently, leaving problems that remain today, he said.
A must read.


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