Posted on 03/01/2004 4:41:59 PM PST by SJackson
Every time there is some kind of policy proposal or strategic vision for the Middle East region, it becomes a controversial issue here. The reason is that people in the Middle East see things differently from what the West envisions for them and believe that Western governments do not fully understand their political culture. This is usually followed by accusations of conspiracies and allegations of neoimperialism to subdue the region to serve the Wests economic interests and impose its political hegemony.
Recently, the United States proposed a Greater Middle East Initiative in reaction to the last 2002 UN Arab Human Development Report, which sets forth the roots of Arab underdevelopment: A deficit of freedom, lack of womens empowerment and educational backwardness. Observers in the area perceive this new US initiative as resembling the Helsinki accord, signed in 1975 by 35 nations including the US, Soviet Union and almost all European countries. Helsinki was designed to recognize disputed post-World War II borders and establish a mechanism for settling other disagreements to improve security and promote cooperation. The Western countries then believed that by protecting human rights and encouraging freedom, they would instigate the demise of Communism in the East.
The Bush administration wants to introduce the new initiative to minimize the appeal of Islamic fundamentalism, which is spreading. The United States has made it clear it does not want to go it alone but would like the collaboration of EU countries. It indicated it would try to lobby for support during the NATO and G-8 summits in June. Yet the Europeans view the initiative with skepticism. They insist that it should not be dictated to them but rather presented, in agreement with the parties concerned, within the framework of a security partnership in support of reform and democracy. They also believe that political change and reform cannot progress in the Middle East without settling the Arab-Israeli conflict.
The initiative produced conflicting reactions in the Greater Middle East. Some believe that this is a continuation of what the Americans started in Iraq but through peaceful means. Others argue that it is more like a US-sponsored neocolonialism and that Washington is trying to involve Europe only to guarantee UN and global support.
People in the region acknowledge that other countries have surpassed them in development; they lag behind in economic productivity and have not been able to move ahead with political reform. However, they insist that the blame is not solely theirs but should also be placed on US policies in the Middle East over the past decades.
Throughout the second half of the 20th century, numerous wars were fought in the Middle East, ignited directly or indirectly either by West European states or the United States. The 1948, 1956, 1967 and 1973 wars were related to the Arab-Israeli conflict which cost human lives, drained resources, and left the region with economic difficulties, crushing deficits and arrested development. The countries involved directly in these wars were Egypt, Syria, and Jordan. But the Gulf countries took part indirectly by funding military programs or imposing the oil embargo. Then, there was the 1975-1989 Lebanese civil war, the US-sponsored Mujahedeen fighting against the 1979 Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, the 1978 Iranian uprising against the Shahs regime, the 1980-1988 Iraqi-Iranian war, the first Gulf War and, last but not least, the second Gulf War and the US occupation of Iraq. This was the straw that broke the camels back.
Apart from these major wars, there are numerous other conflicts such as the Algeria-Morocco dispute over the Sahara desert, the Pakistani-Indian conflict over Kashmir, the Algerian civil war, the north-south war in Sudan, the Yemen war, border disputes between several Gulf states, the Eritrea-Ethiopian war, the Somalia war. All this had its impact on the greater Middle East as a whole.
Not only did it traumatize families with the loss of lives of loved ones, it also devastated many others psychologically, their feelings of anger and hostility exacerbated by depression and humiliation.
Muslims in times of crisis tend to turn to God and His Holy Book looking for salvation. This is probably a reason for the surge in conservatism in most of the countries in the Greater Middle East area including secular Turkey. The greater the interference or pressures from the West on these countries whether peacefully by encouraging reform and democracy or militarily by invading them or economically by imposing sanctions and isolation the more people turn to fundamentalism. This can eventually turn into militancy, as was the case in Iran during the Shahs regime, leading to the Islamic revolution.
Ideally, defending freedom, encouraging political reform and ensuring human rights are all popular demands that should come from within. They are not strategic goals for countries from without. If the United States and the West seek security partnerships with the Greater Middle Eastern countries and propose economic cooperation in the sincere hope of achieving progress and prosperity there, shouldnt the West make peace with Islam first?
Dr. Mariam Al-Oraifi is a Saudi academic.
Yeah, the same way we made peace with Japan. Look at how peaceful and productive the Japanese people are now!
WARNING: This is a high volume ping list
Ok, I'm feeling ignorant. I looked this up and I see Algeria and Morocco have been fighting over a thin strip land called the Western Sahara ever since Spain handed it over to Morocco. I was thinking I must be missing something, but apparently its only natural resources are phosphates and iron ore, none of the land is considered arable, and only a small amount of it is considered "pasture." Why are they fighting over a broiling wasteland?
Who is the "GREAT SPOKESMAN" to whom we may bow down and humble our unworthyselves? Will the devout follow the "GREAT SPOKESMAN'S" edicts and "get over it"?... I'm thinkin not
Who started the war?
The US will make peace with those who start wars with us as we have always done. We will defeat them on the field of battle then help them to get back on their feet.
The battle is now joined, and they're going to loose.
LOL!
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