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Blind
Imperial Arrogance
Vile Stereotyping of Arabs by
the
U.S.
Ensures Years of Turmoil
By Edward Said
The Los Angeles Times,
July 20, 2003 : The great modern empires have
never been held together only by military
power.
Britain ruled the vast territories of India with only a few thousand colonial officers and
a few more thousand troops, many of them
Indian.
France did the same in North Africa and Indochina, the Dutch in
Indonesia,
the Portuguese and Belgians in Africa. The key element was
imperial
perspective, that way of looking at a distant foreign reality
by
subordinating it in one's gaze, constructing its history from one's
own
point of view, seeing its people as subjects whose fate can be decided by what distant
administrators think is best for them. From such
willful
perspectives ideas develop, including the theory that imperialism
is a
benign and necessary thing.
For a while
this worked, as many local leaders believed -- mistakenly --
that
cooperating with the imperial authority was the only way. But because the dialectic between
the imperial perspective and the local one
is
adversarial and impermanent, at some point the conflict between ruler
and
ruled becomes uncontainable and breaks out into colonial war, as
happened
in Algeria and India. We are still a long way from that moment
in
American rule over the Arab and Muslim world because, over the last
century,
pacification through unpopular local rulers has so far worked.
At least
since World War II, American strategic interests in the Middle
East
have been, first, to ensure supplies of oil and, second, to
guarantee at
enormous cost the strength and domination of Israel over its
neighbors.
Every empire,
however, tells itself and the world that it is unlike all
other
empires, that its mission is not to plunder and control but to
educate
and liberate. These ideas are by no means shared by the people
who
inhabit that empire, but that hasn't prevented the U.S. propaganda
and policy
apparatus from imposing its imperial perspective on Americans,
whose
sources of information about Arabs and Islam are woefully
inadequate.
Several
generations of Americans have come to see the Arab world mainly
as a
dangerous place, where terrorism and religious fanaticism are
spawned
and where a
gratuitous anti-Americanism is inculcated in the young by
evil clerics who
are anti-democratic and virulently anti-Semitic.
In the U.S.,
"Arabists" are under attack. Simply to speak
Arabic or to have
some sympathetic acquaintance with the vast Arab cultural tradition
has
been made to seem a threat to Israel. The media runs the vilest
racist
stereotypes
about Arabs -- see, for example, a piece by Cynthia Ozick in
the
Wall Street Journal in which she speaks of Palestinians as having
"reared
children unlike any other children, removed from ordinary
norms
and
behaviors" and of Palestinian culture as "the life force
traduced, cultism
raised to a sinister spiritualism."
But so accustomed have Americans become
to their own ignorance and the
blandishments
of U.S. advisors like Bernard Lewis and Fouad Ajami, who have
directed their venom against the Arabs in every possible way, that we
somehow think that what we do is correct.... |
.
Americans are sufficiently blind that when a Middle Eastern leader emerges whom our leaders like
-- the Shah of Iran or Anwar Sadat -- it
is
assumed that he is a visionary who does things our way not because he
understands the game of imperial power (which is to survive by humoring
the
regnant authority) but because he is moved by principles that we
share.
Almost a quarter of a century after his assassination, Sadat is a forgotten and unpopular man in
his own country because most Egyptians
regard
him as having served the U.S. first, not Egypt. The same is true
of the shah in Iran. That Sadat and the shah were followed in power by
rulers
who are less palatable to the U.S. indicates not that Arabs are
fanatics,
but that the distortions of imperialism produce further distortions, inducing extreme
forms of resistance and political
self-
assertion.
The Palestinians are considered to have reformed themselves by allowing
Mahmoud
Abbas, rather than the terrible Yasser Arafat, to be their leader. But "reform" is
a matter of imperial interpretation.
Israel and
the U.S. regard Arafat as an obstacle to the settlement they wish to
impose
on the Palestinians, a settlement that would obliterate Palestinian demands and allow
Israel to claim, falsely, that it has atoned for its "original sin."
Never mind that Arafat -- whom I have criticized for years in the
Arabic
and
Western media -- is still universally regarded as the legitimate
Palestinian
leader. He was legally elected and has a level of popular
support that no other Palestinian approaches, least of all Abbas, a bureaucrat and longtime Arafat
subordinate. And never mind that there is
now a
coherent Palestinian opposition, the Independent National
Initiative; it
gets no attention because the U.S. and the Israeli establishment wish
for a
compliant interlocutor who is in no position to make trouble. As to
whether
the Abbas arrangement can work, that is put off to another day.
This
is shortsightedness indeed -- the blind arrogance of the imperial
gaze.
The same pattern is repeated in the official U.S. view of Iraq,
Saudi
Arabia, Egypt and the other Arab states.
Underlying this perspective is a long-standing view -- the Orientalist
view
-- that denies Arabs their right to national self-determination
because
they are considered incapable of logic, unable to tell the truth
and fundamentally murderous.
Since Napoleon's invasion of Egypt in 1798, there has been an uninterrupted imperial
presence based on these premises throughout
theArab world,
producing untold misery -- and some benefits, it is true.
But so
accustomed have Americans become to their own ignorance and the
blandishments
of U.S. advisors like Bernard Lewis and Fouad Ajami, who have
directed their venom against the Arabs in every possible way, that we
somehow think that what we do is correct because "that's the way
the Arabs
are." That this happens also to be an Israeli dogma shared
uncritically
by the neo-conservatives who are at the heart of the Bush
administration
simply adds fuel to the fire.
We are in for many more years of turmoil and misery in the Middle East,
where
one of the main problems is, to put it as plainly as possible,
U.S.
power. What the U.S. refuses to see clearly it can hardly
hope to
remedy.
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