Robert Fisk: This loose conjecture is unlikely to cut much ice with the Arab
nations
05 October 2001



The Americans are finding it a hard sell in the Middle East, and the British
Government's document "proving" Osama bin Laden's responsibility for the 11
September atrocities is unlikely to rally the Arab world to the West's "war
on terrorism". Only nine of the 70 points in the document relate to the
attacks on the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, and these often rely on
conjecture rather than evidence. Claiming that "an operation on the scale of
the 11 September attacks would have been approved by Osama bin Laden
himself" (point 63) is not going to cut much ice in Saudi Arabia or other
Gulf states.

In Riyadh, the US Defence Secretary, Donald Rumsfeld, admitted the Saudis
were worried about the "secondary effects" of a "war on terror" - shorthand
for the fear of the House of Saud that their regime may be overthrown if
America bombs Afghanistan and kills Mr bin Laden. Mr Rumsfeld's remarks show
just how frightened the Saudis are of associating themselves with President
Bush's war. "We had a very substantive and interesting and thoughtful
discussion about the nature of the problem and the complexities of the
problem, and the importance of dealing with it in a way that recognises
secondary effects that could occur," he said after his talks with King Fahd
and Crown Prince Abdullah. Which doesn't sound like wholehearted support for
the US.

Events are now moving at such speed that for many Arab nations, the details,
or lack of details, of Mr bin Laden's involvement in the 11 September
hijackings may appear almost irrelevant. The destruction of a charter flight
from Tel Aviv and the loss of all its passengers over the Black Sea may
exacerbate the conflict in the Middle East. Most Arab leaders regard Mr bin
Laden as a threat to their own stability, let alone America's, and would be
happy to accept our "evidence" of his guilt. But they are unlikely to
convince their people of this.

Newspapers in the Gulf and in Egypt, Mr Rumsfeld's next destination, are
almost uniformly anti-American, repeatedly demanding an end to the "double
standards" of the US, its unconditional support for Israel and its refusal
to understand the Arab struggle against "Israeli terrorism". Editorial
writers are likely to be less than enthusiastic about a document which uses
evidence of Mr bin Laden's involvement in earlier bombings to imply his
guilt for the crimes against humanity on 11 September.

Arabs studying the British document may be amused to learn that Mr bin Laden
runs a holding company called Wadi al Aqiq, which translates as "Valley of
the Brown Gem", and Al Themar Al Mubaraka, "The Blessed Fruit", and
intrigued by the information that an American warship was attacked by
apparent suicide bombers several months before the bombing of the USS Cole
in Aden harbour. They will be less impressed by the statement that "on 3 and
4 October, operatives of al-Qa'ida participated in the attack on US military
personnel serving in Somalia as part of the operation "Restore Hope". The
Americans were in fact attacking the presumed base of a Somali warlord when
their helicopters were shot down by gunmen, including some of Mr bin Laden's
men.

But as usual in the Arab world, what the people think and what the kings and
presidents believe are not necessarily the same thing. Any Gulf emir reading
Mr bin Laden's words about "cleansing" the Gulf of Americans will realise
that the kings and sultans who invited the Americans are among those Mr bin
Laden wants "cleansed". The British Government may feel that Mr bin Laden's
remark about "Satan's US troops and the devil's supporters allying with
them" refers "unquestionably" to the United Kingdom, but the Saudi royal
family knows that the "devil's supporters" undoubtedly alludes to them.

America has meanwhile been expressing its anger at the only free Arab
television station, the al-Jazeera channel transmitting from Qatar. The
State Department, which only a year ago was praising the station as a
bastion of free speech in the Middle East, has now asked the Qatari
government to "rein in" al-Jazeera because it is allegedly inciting
anti-American sentiments. Al-Jazeera, which interviewed the US Secretary of
State Colin Powell only a week ago, just happens to be the only Arab station
with correspondents in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.

But muzzling Qatari television is not going to change the bleak prospects of
Arab co-operation in Mr Bush's war. With the Gulf largely unhelpful and
Egypt anxious to avoid its own social explosion, the Americans appear to be
looking north, to the former Soviet Muslim republics, for real military
assistance in an Afghan war.

Reply via email to