![]() Challenge No. 70
Afghan BoomerangAmerica's nurture of militant Islam and the miscalculations of Osama Bin LadenYacov Ben Efrat![]() Introduction: Made by the USAUntil recently, the name "Afghanistan" had an exotic ring to many, but not to US policy-makers. For a decade (1979-1989) they backed the Afghan war against the Soviet Union, contributing to the latter's collapse. The new world order had its start, one might say, in this desolate country, although it reached its heyday a short time later in the Gulf War.Among the "Mujahidin" who fought the Soviet Union were some who refused to accept the new world order. They saw the Afghan victory as a sign of Islamic superiority. The anti-Soviet war was a struggle against an Infidel Empire. The support they had received from America seemed to them merely a temporary conjunction of interests. The existence of these maverick groups, with their offbeat interpretation, aroused no misgivings in Washington. There were two reasons for complacency. One was the lopsided balance of forces: a great world power could hardly feel threatened by scattered bands of lightly armed fighters. Secondly, these former allies continued to collaborate in the US campaign to smash the Yugoslav federation, first in Bosnia, later in Kosovo. They also inflamed the war against Russia in Chechnya; here they cooperated with American oil companies, which sought to secure the energy resources of the Caspian Sea. In Afghanistan, one of these groups, the Taliban, took power by force in 1996. It sheltered and sustained Osama Bin Laden, who issued a religious decree in 1998 calling for jihad, holy war, against the US. Yet here an additional factor blinded Washington: its regional allies, Saudi Arabia, Pakistan and the United Arab Emirates, all supported the Taliban with arms and money. Indeed, the sole recognition of the Taliban government came from these three. How could America's main Muslim allies support the Taliban, who backed
Osama Bin Laden's decree of jihad? And why did America fail to take the
threat seriously?
I. Afghanistan:forsaken landFrom 1979 until 1989, the US was extremely busy in Afghanistan, then ruled by forces of the Soviet Union. America saw the Soviet presence as a threat to its influence in central Asia, and especially as a threat to its allies, Pakistan and Turkey. The Iranian revolution had recently toppled the Shah. This trauma heightened America's anxiety about Afghanistan's fall to the Soviets. As a counterweight, Anwar Sadat signed the Camp David Accords, crossing to the Western bloc. Yet because of his subsequent isolation in the Arab world, his about-face did not reassure America concerning the area's future.In order to realize its ambition of shaping events in Afghanistan, the US needed a more aggressive foreign policy. That required an internal transformation. It happened at the end of 1980, when conservative Republican Ronald Reagan defeated Democrat Jimmy Carter. Reagan entered the White House armed with an extreme anti-Soviet political program. Almost immediately he found a close ally in Pakistan's leader, General Zia al-Haq, who had overthrown the legal government of Ali Bhutto three years earlier. The Carter Administration had imposed sanctions on Pakistan because of its nuclear-weapons program and abuses of human rights; Reagan promptly canceled them. He provided generous military assistance. Pakistan became third among the nations receiving US foreign aid. (Digital National Security Archive.*) In return, it supported US policy. In order to win domestic legitimacy for his dictatorial regime, General
Zia began to depend on Islamist tendencies. While suppressing political
parties and canceling freedoms, he tried to give the regime a new identity.
Among the religious movements he relied on was Jama'at al-Islam, a right-wing
fundamentalist party founded in 1941. Zia gave it broad powers to administer
the educational system, including the universities. He also helped it gain
influence over the media. (Alavi.)
In 1987, American military assistance to the Afghan rebels reached $700 million - more than Pakistan got. The CIA took care to equip them with new high-grade weapons. Yet the agency took care, also, that the arms should not come directly from the US. It wanted to obscure the American presence in the area. (Digital National Security Archive, 2001.) In order to diminish financial activity between the US and Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia was engaged to transfer large sums of money from its accounts, which the CIA managed behind the scenes. When Soviet troops withdrew from Afghanistan, the country sank into civil war. The various Muslim forces that had fought together could not agree about apportioning power. Hekmatyar, still supported by Pakistan, failed to capture Kabul, the capital. The battles between his forces and those of his rival, Ahmad Shah Masoud, tore the country to pieces. Anarchy reigned. II. The Taliban Conquest of AfghanistanThe Taliban movement has its origin in a network of religious schools, established in Pakistan by another Islamist party, Jama'iyyat Ulama al-Islam. In the early nineties, some four thousand madrassas (boarding schools) sprang up all over Pakistan, especially near the Afghan border (where two million Afghan refugees were living in camps). These schools included not only refugee children, but also sons of wealthy Pakistani families. At present they have half a million pupils. (Rashid.)Until 1993 Jama'iyyat Ulama al-Islam was still a rather isolated party in Pakistani politics. Then, however, it joined the government of Benazir Bhutto. The coalition was headed by the Pakistani People's Party (PPP). Under this aegis, the madrassas of Jama'iyyat Ulama al-Islam trained their pupils within a military and political framework. Out of it came the Taliban movement, under the supervision and responsibility of Pakistan's ISI. In August 1994, the Pakistani regime decided to use the Taliban in order to establish control over Afghanistan, where it intended to impose order and stability. It sent the young fighters to carry out the task in which Hekmatyar had failed. (Pakistan had become disenchanted with Hekmatyar four years before in the Gulf crisis: he had taken a pro-Iraqi stance. This had also angered his patrons, the Saudis.) The chief of Jama'iyyat Ulama al-Islam, Mullah Fadel al-Rahman (once head of the Pakistani parliament's Foreign Affairs Committee) at this time made a series of visits to Saudi Arabia. His aim was to persuade the Saudis to support the new Pakistani policy in Afghanistan. The head of the Saudi secret service, Prince Turki al-Faisal, then paid a visit to the Taliban's center at Kandahar in southern Afghanistan. Pakistan's pressure bore fruit: the Saudis decided to finance the Taliban. (Hiro.) They had an additional motive to do so. Jama'iyyat Ulama al-Islam and the Taliban belong to an Islamic school of thought known as Deoband, named after the Indian town where it was founded in 1867. This school is based on a separatist, reactionary interpretation of Islam. Deoband is very close to the Wahabi school, to which the Saudi royal family belongs. The US joined its allies in aiding the Taliban movement, ignoring
its cruelty toward Afghan citizens. Washington pursued a single objective
only: control over the oil and gas resources in the Caspian Sea. On September
26, 1996, after seven years of civil war, the Taliban captured Kabul, the
capital. They imposed their authority and secured, for a short time, a
measure of stability. (Maroofi.)
The Taliban victory in Afghanistan resulted not from divine intervention, rather from the support of Pakistan's army and secret service, together with American and Saudi money. In less abnormal circumstances, even all these would not have sufficed. One more element was required: Afghanistan's sheer backwardness. Were it not for that, a movement with so benighted an interpretation of Islam could never have taken over. This movement could only find footing in a country lacking the infrastructure of modern life. III. A utopian plan to restore the caliphateIn 1995 Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak was visiting Ethiopia when an attempt was made on his life. It was linked to associates of Osama Bin Laden, then in Sudan. Egypt and Saudi Arabia brought pressure to bear on Sudan, which expelled Bin Laden. He returned to Afghanistan in May 1996. On September 26, Taliban forces entered Kabul and took control of the country.The intimate relation between Bin Laden and the Taliban did not result from any interest on his part in the welfare of the Afghan people. The need to restore the ravaged land had no place on his agenda. On the contrary, devastation and backwardness provided fertile soil for his megalomaniac program: to turn Afghanistan into a major base of jihad fighters for the sake of Islamic conquest. The Taliban movement did not establish a modern system of government. It did not aim to solve the economic and social crisis, caused by years of war and drought. Instead, through a special police system, it set about enforcing its reactionary Wahabi version of Islam. The new laws proscribed, among other things, listening to music or making art. Afghan women paid the highest price. The Taliban forbade them to study or work or even, except under strictly defined conditions, to go out of doors. The Taliban did bring relative stability, however, which stopped the flow of refugees to Pakistan. This neighbor viewed the new government in a favorable light and acted as its patron. To Pakistan, a friendly Afghanistan is a source of strategic depth. It provides vital help in the confrontation with India over the control of central Asia. In particular, the Taliban jihad fighters reinforce pro-Pakistan troops in disputed Kashmir. In the border battles of May 1999, between India and Pakistan, Bin Laden's forces played a major role. Thus, despite its poverty and devastation, Afghanistan has become a
crucial zone for regional and global interests. The Taliban government,
for its part, has chained the Afghan people to its struggle for the Islamic
nation. The aim is nothing less than to impose its reactionary version
of Islam on a global scale. For starters, it did not balk at cooperation
with America. The jihad fighters joined Uncle Sam in conflicts ranging
from the Balkans through Chechnya to the Philippines. Osama Bin Laden and
the Taliban developed a symbiotic relationship. The latter adopted the
former's utopian program, according to which all Muslims should unite beneath
a restored caliphate. They should rid the Muslim world of infidels and
cancel national borders. The effect of Bin Laden's vision would be to isolate
the Muslim world. He believes he can only achieve this goal by the violent
overthrow of existing Arab regimes. His organizational tool is the al-Qaeda
movement. This arose during the anti-Soviet revolt, as a means of coordinating
Arab volunteers who came to help the Afghans.
Despite the dramatic effects of the recent terrorist attacks,
there is nothing new in their underlying concept: a group of extremists
undertook a spectacular act, aimed at arousing the masses to action. The
same concept guided the Bader-Meinhof group in Germany, the Red Brigades
in Italy and the Montoneros in Argentina. Such organizations, whether left
or right, were far removed ideologically from the Islam of Osama Bin Laden.
Yet all shared a belief that terror would pave the way for change. All
shared, that is, the quality of impatience. Their end was abject failure.
Their adventurist tactics enabled the authorities to isolate and eliminate
them. Their terrorist acts provided a pretext to put down, in addition,
more patient revolutionary movements, which were engaged in the slow work
of building a true alternative.
IV. Decline of the global jihadIn February 1998, Bin Laden and Aiman al-Zawahari, leader of Egypt's Islamic jihad, united various Islamic groups under a single roof: "The Global Islamic Front Against the Jews and the Crusaders." Clerics who identified with the Front published a fatwa (a decree of Islamic law), stating: "To kill Americans and their allies, civilian or military, is an obligation for every Muslim capable of doing so, wherever possible. This decree will be in effect until the liberation of the al-Aqsa Mosque and the Holy Mosque (in Mecca - YBE) and until their armies withdraw from all the lands of Islam." (al-Quds al-Arabi, February 1998). This decree was a desperate measure. It was meant to revive the jihad groups, whose status, for reasons we shall now explore, had been severely shaken in the Arab world.1. The failure of jihad in Algeria
V. Operation "Day of Judgment"The Islamic awakening did not progress at the rate Osama Bin Laden desired. At the same time, however, the status of the US itself declined in the Arab and Muslim worlds. Popular rage against America (and Israel) came to a head in October 2000, when the masses went into the streets in support of the Intifada. Bin Laden did not ignore this. These energies, he understood, were directed not only against Israel and Washington, but also against America's Arab allies, above all Egypt and Saudi Arabia.Massive demonstrations broke out in the whole Arab world, including the Gulf states, and among the Arabs in Israel. The opposition to America focused on three issues: (1) Its one-sided support for Israel against the Palestinians; (2) its sanctions against Iraq; and (3) its support for India against Pakistan. Behind these issues lay a broader background of unemployment, poverty and backwardness. Arab public opinion made it difficult for the regimes to maintain open, friendly relations with the US. As soon as the Intifada broke out, they hastened to convene an Arab summit - the first since the Gulf War - to deflect the criticism. They changed their line to save their skins. Egypt and the Gulf States had established diplomatic and economic relations with Israel during the nineties. They had supported the Palestinian surrender at Oslo. Now, suddenly, they launched a crude propaganda campaign against Israel and America. The campaign has lasted a year. It has included most of the Arab media, from newspapers to satellite TV. It has filled an important function in awakening popular feeling to identify with the Intifada. Within Arab public opinion, it has created the impression of an imminent war against "the Jews and Crusaders". Islamist forces did score points on the Israeli front, although without
connection to Bin Laden. First, under the military pressure of the Hizballah
(the Islamic "Party of God"), Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon in
May 2000. Fanatical Islamic organizations continued to carry out suicide
attacks inside the country. These successes tended to nourish, among extremists,
the feeling that the moment of decision was near. Islam seemed capable
of leading the faithful to victory. In the upsurge of faith, the real balance
of forces was forgotten.
(1) On May 28, 1998 Pakistan carried out a successful nuclear test.
This had a tremendous effect on the Muslim states in the region, including
the fundamentalist movements. Saudi Arabia was among the first to cheer.
Much of its enthusiasm derived from the fact that its two major enemies,
Iraq and Iran, are well underway toward developing their own.
(2) At the time of the nuclear test, Nawaz Sharif was still president
of Pakistan. He tried to reach agreement with India over Kashmir. Behind
his back, General Pervez Musharaf led the army and the jihad militias,
attacking inside that province. He meant to torpedo the pending agreement.
Like all Pakistani generals, Musharaf feared that a treaty with India would
weaken the army's domestic position. This army draws its power and influence
from a strange mix of modern arms and Muslim extremism, aimed against the
arch-infidels, India and America.
VI. Saudi Arabia - The Weak LinkTo understand America's difficulty in coping with the Bin Laden phenomenon, we need to explore the complex relations between the US and Saudi Arabia. We have mentioned the latter's cooperation with the CIA in financing the Afghan Mujahidin. With the passage of time, however, a conflict of interest has developed between Riyadh and Washington. After the attacks on the American embassies in Nairobi and Dar al-Salam (August 1998), the US retaliated against Bin Laden's bases in Afghanistan, as well as a pharmaceutical factory in Sudan (which it claimed was making chemical weapons). On February 8, 1999, the New York Times quoted CIA Director George Tenet as telling Congress that Bin Laden could strike "at any time" against symbols of American power. The Times noted a consensus, among US policy makers, "that Bin Laden has strong political support even among American allies abroad." He "receives money and political support from princes of the Saudi royal family, whose king he has vowed to depose, and from powerful people and financial institutions in Kuwait and Qatar, where there is a strong American military presence, U.S. officials said." (Weiner.)Washington wasn't blind to the seriousness of the situation. Concerns about Saudi Arabia's ambivalent relation to America had begun to grow after June 25, 1996. On that date an explosion in an American base at Khobar in Saudi Arabia killed 19 US soldiers. The Saudi government refused to cooperate with Washington in investigating the incident. On the contrary, the Saudis did all they could to conceal information and keep the Americans from gathering evidence. To this day, five years later, the incident at Khobar remains a mystery. No one has been brought to trial. Louis Freeh, head of the FBI, "gave an example of how the Americans were cold-shouldered: the Chevrolet used in the attack had been found at the start of July 1996, but it took more than six months and the most highly-placed intercessions before the FBI was allowed to examine the vehicle." (Middle East International.) Saudi Arabia attempted to create the impression that Iran-backed Shi'ites had made the attack. Its version did not persuade Washington. On July 6, 2001 the Al-Jazeera television network broadcast a talk show called "More Than One View" (Aktar min Rai), including Saudi and Iranian participants. They exposed several important facts concerning the attack in Khobar. Dr. Sa'ad al-Fakiyya, head of the Islamic Reform Movement in Saudi Arabia, called in to say, "Let's be clear. A group of six Sunni Muslims was arrested in connection with the attack at Khobar. Their link to it has in effect been proved. These six… aren't the only ones. Hundreds were arrested after the attack, in a wide-ranging action that brought in everyone who was thought to be a supporter or who had any connection whatever to the war in Afghanistan." Dr. al-Fakiyya explained why the Saudis kept the Americans from investigating: "If this group or another, in the attacks at Riyadh or Khobar, is shown to be connected to Bin Laden, it will demonstrate that there is a local Sunni group opposing the regime and threatening its stability. The Saudi fear of such a revelation led them, instead, to blame the Shi'ite opposition." The program host, Sami Hadad, added the following: "In October 1998,
the French News Agency cited a source in the Saudi Interior Ministry, who
said that the Saudis had expelled the Taliban representatives because their
government was sheltering people wanted in connection with the attack at
Khobar." The Assistant Editor of al-Shark al-Awsat, Muhammad Awam, confirmed
this claim.
Whatever the results of the CIA investigation, it is clear what Washington
decided to do in the wake of the Khobar attack: keep mum. At the same time,
it seems, Saudi Arabia reached understandings with the Taliban and Bin
Laden. The latter agreed to cease attacking inside the Saudi borders. In
return, the Saudis would continue to provide financial support and refrain
from bringing the Khobar attackers to trial. We have no proof of such understandings,
but the fact is, terrorist activity did stop inside the country until an
explosion in Khobar at the start of October 2001, after the attacks on
America. (Here too the pattern has repeated itself: investigation has yielded
no publicly visible results.)
Three years before the attacks on America, in October 1998, Le Monde
Diplomatique published the following analysis: "The Saudi model of alliance
between conservative Islamic fundamentalism and the West has failed. The
problem for Washington is that it has no alternative political strategy
vis-à-vis the Muslim world. On the Saudi side, the double talk of
Prince Turki, a convinced pro-American who has always supported the radical
Sunni movements and was still with the Taliban in the spring of this year,
is reaching its limits. Riyadh is spending large sums of money to fund
Islamist networks that actually feel nothing but contempt for the emirs
and their petrodollars and think the Islamic State of Saudi Arabia would
be even more Islamic without the Saud dynasty." (Roy.)
VII. America with no alternativeIt isn't easy to grasp what alternative America has in relation to Afghanistan, perhaps because she has none. That is why Washington delayed its military response for almost a month. Even today it is hard to define the purposes of this war or the standards by which to measure success or failure. It seems strange that to catch one man and his followers hiding in caves, a great power moves aircraft carriers and army divisions across vast seas.This war was imposed on America. Bin Laden and Afghanistan were by no means on its agenda. Many of the organizations and people labeled "terrorist" after September 11 had been known to the US Administration for quite some time. They had operated in America and Europe without interference. Some of Bin Laden's associates, for example, though sentenced to death by Egypt, won political asylum in Britain, where they engaged in media activities and ran a ramified financial network. Before September 11, Washington did not view the massacres of Algerians by the hundreds of thousands, or the murders of tourists in Egypt, as a grave enough problem to justify outlawing or restraining these organizations. Before September 11, in fact, the foreign policy of the United States was directed mainly against Russia. America views Russia as a nuclear power that competes with it for influence in the vital areas of central Europe, the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf. As for Bin Laden, he was not considered as serious a threat as "rogue states" like Iran, Iraq and North Korea. The main strategic initiative of George W. Bush was to cancel the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty of 1972 and increase the effort to build an anti-missile defense system, which was supposed to ensure supremacy over Russia. Although he has not given this up, the attack on America has shifted priorities and changed the political map. The New York Times, on September 27, exposed a small part of the web that America had woven around Russia: "Russia has helped decisively in preparations for any military action in Afghanistan and today it was rewarded. The United States, in a clear shift, stated for the first time that the Al Qaeda network played a role in inciting the bloody rebellion in the Russian territory of Chechnya." This new position signifies a sharp turn in the American attitude toward Russia. Just a few months ago, during his election campaign, Bush threatened to cut off aid to Russia because of its attacks on Chechnya. During a television interview in February 2000, Bush said, "This guy, Putin, who is now the temporary president, has come to power as a result of Chechnya." He added that Putin dealt with Chechnya in a way "that's not acceptable to peaceful nations." (Dau.) Why only now does Washington acknowledge the role Bin Laden played in
the Chechnyan uprising? The answer is simple. Earlier, the US was interested
mainly in besmirching Russia's name and undermining its influence. Osama
Bin Laden seemed a minor problem.
VIII. The War and the Global Economic DownturnThe roots of the "first war of the 21st century" may be found in the wars America waged in the 1990's against Iraq and Yugoslavia. It fought against countries that could offer no resistance, military or economic. It paraded these wars under enlightened titles such as the defense of ethnic groups, of human rights, of democracy. Their single purpose, however, was to enforce a new world order, commanded by the United States. The wars resulted in a great many victims, the destruction of nation-states, and structural destabilization on a global scale.That destabilization was the topic of an article in Le Monde Diplomatique (June 1999): "When the cold war came to an end, civil conflicts in the developing world did not. On the contrary they redoubled in intensity. Since the fall of the Berlin Wall (1989) more than 23 situations of internal warfare have appeared, or been reactivated - with more than 50 armed groups involved…In many countries (for instance Angola, Somalia and Sierra Leone) the destructiveness of these ongoing national conflicts follows a pattern. … Rebel groups vie with each other for a monopoly of violence, previously the prerogative of the state. When this happens, the developing nation-state implodes and turns into an ungovernable chaotic entity. …Whole sectors of the economy, towns, provinces and regions fall under the yoke of new warlords, drug traffickers or mafia. This is currently the case in Afghanistan…" The article goes on to name fourteen more "ungovernable chaotic entities," including Somalia, Kosovo, Bosnia, Chechnya and Haiti. (De Rivero.) Soon the West Bank and Gaza may join the list, as a result of the American-sponsored Oslo Accords. Structural instability is the consequence of a global economic regime that furthers the interests of big industrial concerns, above all the oil companies. Since 1997, the world has teetered on the edge of economic crisis. This causes direct damage to two kinds of countries: those with medium-sized economies, such as Brazil, Argentina and the East Asian "tigers"; and poor ones like Egypt. The enormous popular rage against America derives from the ravages caused by its new world order. Millions of people all over the world find themselves left out of the global economy, with neither income nor future. The use of force to impose hegemony is a sign of weakness. It shows that the global capitalist regime is nearing collapse. Anarchy in weaker lands may be taken as the first sparrow. For the past two years, however, the crisis has been hitting the big industrial centers. Japan, Europe and America itself were slipping into recession even before the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. These came as a rude awakening: the malignancy has not stayed locked up within the borders of Africa, Asia or Latin America. It has found its way to the nerve-center of the capitalist order. The present and future anarchy does not know borders. New technology
and high-speed transportation, the vital organs of globalization, constitute
a two-edged sword. With all the good they have done, especially for the
multinationals, they also made it possible for nineteen fundamentalist
extremists to go to flying school and strike at the heart of America.
EpilogueSoon after the suicide actions, the New Statesman, a British weekly close to the Labor Party, included the following analysis in its lead editorial (Sept. 17, 2001). "Since the communist bloc began to weaken in the 1980s, and finally collapsed in the 1990s, capitalism has reverted to type, though with most of the misery exported from the industrialized nations. A world in which there is only one superpower deprives poor countries of the best lever for improving themselves that they ever had: if one side wouldn't provide aid, in cash or kind, they could go straight to the other. True, this kind of blackmail allowed many cruel and corrupt dictators to retain power. But you may be sure that, if the Soviet Union were still a reality and a threat, the debt crisis, which now affects some 50 countries and has reached previously unimagined levels (some countries have to use a quarter of their export earnings to service debt), would not exist….The death of the Soviet Union also deprived the global poor of something more intangible: not exactly hope, perhaps, but the sense of an alternative, of possibility."These points are clearly beyond the comprehension of Osama Bin Laden and his band. When he called on Muslims to wage a jihad against American bases in Saudi Arabia, against the siege on Iraq and against the oppression of the Palestinians, he forgot one thing: it was he and his followers who helped bring down the Soviet Union - and who bear, therefore, responsibility for the ills he rails against. How otherwise explain the fact that until the fall of the Soviet Union, the Americans couldn't get a foot in the regional door? How otherwise explain the fact that until this event, forty years had gone by and no country had dared fire ballistic missiles on another's cities? How otherwise explain the fact that the Palestinian people felt forced to accept an agreement amounting to surrender? Who would ever have imagined, before the fall of the Soviet Union, that Arab states would stand by America in a war against Iraq? Or that they would let the option of war against Israel be swept from their hands? In Lebanon in the early 1980s, when Palestinians resisted Israel and received support from the Soviet Union, Bin Laden (with Saudi help) gave America a gift in Afghanistan. Instead of defending the oppressed, he struck at their ally. If the Arab volunteers in Afghanistan had really wanted to sacrifice themselves, they could have gone to Beirut when it was under siege, at a time when the Palestinians and Lebanese desperately needed Arab solidarity. Why didn't they go? Because the war in Beirut, unlike that in Afghanistan, was being fought against American imperialism, and this didn't fit their concept. Osama Bin Laden "beat" communism, but the victory was a Pyrrhic one, and the first of its victims was the Palestinian people. Not just this people, however, but all peoples of the world are paying the price for the Soviet demise. The greatest endeavor in human history here met its end. Absurdly enough, the capitalist regime too pays the price for its downfall. The Soviet Union had ensured a measure of political and economic stability in many lands. Upon its collapse, responsibility passed to the United States. The current global problem, however, is not the fact that there is just one superpower, but the absence of a significant organized political opposition within that superpower. The US prides itself on being the stronghold of democracy. What is this democracy? A coterie shuffles power among its members. Around this magic circle the media form a consensus of specious reasonableness, in which the human causes of massive suffering pass as immutable laws. One result of the lack of broad-based opposition in the US has been the rise of extremist tendencies in the rest of the world. While Americans huddled cozily, enjoying their "way of life," others have been in decline. It is no wonder, therefore, that the poor of the earth, among them Islamic peoples, have developed a deep hatred for America. Its exploitation of them for the sake of its standard of living, accompanied by indifference to their catastrophes, has led to the present state of things, where the US has become a target. A true response to the recent events, on the part of the American people, would be to take a stand - and offer at last an alternative to the coterie that got them into this mess. It is not accidental that the movement against globalization began in Seattle in 1999. This was a good beginning toward building an alternative. But the recent suicide actions have caught the anti-globalization movement unprepared. Its lack of readiness shows in the absence of a clear political program to counter capitalism. The earth-shaking events of September 11 should make it possible for
popular movements in the industrial nations, and especially in the US,
to put politics back on the public agenda. America still has its masses,
its working class, its unions. It is upon them to put forth a new position,
blocking reactionary trends that threaten to cast the world into anarchy.
- Translated from the Hebrew by Stephen Langfur. Sources Aburish, Said. "The Coming Arab Crash," Mid-East Realities,
October 19, 2001, www.MiddleEast.Org Alavi, Hamza. "Pakistan And Islam:
Ethnicity and Ideology" in Fred Halliday and Hamza Alavi (eds.), State
and Ideology in the Middle East and Pakistan, London & New York, 1988.
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