Posted on 03/31/2003 6:29:31 AM PST by Asher
March 31, 2003, 9:10 a.m.
Goldberg File
Jonah Goldberg
Whats Wrong with the Arab World?
Were not morons, you know.
Are the Arabs really this stupid?
As politically incorrect as this may sound, that's more or less what I keep thinking when I read about the Arab world's response to the war in Iraq. Oh, I don't mean their opposition to the war. While I think it's the wrong position to take, it's hardly fair to say it is an inherently unintelligent point of view. Reasonable and unreasonable people alike may differ on this. Jacques Chirac isn't stupid nor, for that matter, is his old friend Saddam Hussein.
No, what I'm referring to is the widespread outrage from across the region denouncing two alleged alleged accidental misfires of U.S. weapons which Saddam's regime says hit Iraqis. After 58 Iraqi civilians died in a second such incident, newspapers across the Arab world went into overdrive. "Monstrous martyrdom in Baghdad," blared a huge headline in al-Dustur, a Jordanian newspaper. "Dreadful massacre in Baghdad," Egypt's huge Akhbar al-Yawm newspaper declared, featuring pictures of two young victims of the explosion covering half the front page. "Yet another massacre by the coalition of invaders," was the main headline in our ally Saudi Arabia's popular al-Riyadh daily (Note: The first "massacre" claimed 15 lives).
Between these newspapers and the broadcasts of the al-Jazeera television network and numerous similar Arab TV stations, the region is being fed a steady stream of body parts, wailing children, and grieving women.
In response to these images and the corresponding commentary about them, numerous intelligent, successful, Arab civilians from across the Middle East believe that America is willfully murdering Arab civilians in huge numbers. "Those pictures have showed that America's war is not only against the Iraqi regime and the Iraqi army, but also against the Iraqi children and elderly. How can we trust them now?," 19-year-old Mahmoud Sahiouny, a Syrian computer-science student who lives in Beirut asked the Washington Post.
"It is as if you are watching a horror movie," said Summer Said, a journalist for the Cairo Times, an English-language newsmagazine. "I thought, at first, okay, maybe it isn't a war for oil. Maybe America does want to help. Now, it's genocide to me. Is the American government trying to exterminate Arabs?"
And it is precisely this point which makes me ask, Are the Arabs stupid?
For you see, if the goal were to massacre Arabs never mind commit genocide we would not bomb merely two obscure markets. If our goal was to "exterminate Arabs" our precision-guided bombs might land more precisely and more often on Arabs in, say, Basra or Baghdad or Cairo, or wherever else we might find Arabs in large numbers. Instead, the criticism from even the Iraqi military is that we are blowing up empty buildings. Indeed, as of this writing, we've launched more than 17,000 sorties over Iraq in about 12 days. For some perspective, the Dresden firebombing took place over a period of about 18 hours and involved about 2,000 bomber sorties. It killed about 135,000 people. We've launched 8 1/2 times that number of sorties and generated less than 1 percent of the casualties. I'm no bean counter, but if our intent is to "massacre" Arabs, our tax dollars are being woefully misspent.
So, what's going on?
ARAB PRIDE Well, for one thing, the hothouse logic of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is surely spilling over into this one. For decades, Arab governments and the newspapers they control have been pouring gasoline on the fire of Arab resentment toward Israel as a way to deflect attention from their own corrupt and impoverished regimes. No doubt, there are Palestinians with serious and legitimate grievances against Israel (and vice versa) but Arabs in Syria, Egypt, Yemen, Saudi Arabia, etc., who have no plans ever to visit historic Palestine, have no relatives there, and, were it not for the presence of Jews there, would not care about the plight of the Palestinians at all, have been convinced that their problems can be attributed to the oppression of the Palestinians. The Palestinians are the Sudenten Germans for any number of dictatorial regimes, beginning with Iraq.
Indeed, speaking of Iraq, we won't know for sure for some time, but there's every reason to think that since the war began Saddam Hussein has ordered the purposeful murder of more Iraqi civilians then we have killed by mistake, and yet there are no headlines about that in Cairo or Riyadh, and no pictures of Jordanian Arabs tearing apart the Iraqi flag with their teeth in the Washington Post either.
And it has been ever thus. Syria's government wipes out thousands of its own, and no one cares (including, alas, the U.S. government). Syria occupies Lebanon even today and no one wails about the "occupation." Iraq invades Kuwait and it is easily forgiven and forgotten. Shiites in Saudi Arabia are second-class citizens, to say the least. But Israel, ah Israel; if Israeli kills even a single civilian by accident in pursuit of terrorists who blow up children, the charges of "genocide" go up like flags on a football field.
Even the single greatest indictment against Ariel "the Butcher" Sharon centers on an event in which Arab Christians slaughtered Arab Muslims. Whatever Sharon's culpability in the massacres at Shabra and Shatilla, they were almost certainly tangential and inadvertent. Nevertheless, Sharon is routinely denounced as a blood-drinking warmonger, while Yasser Arafat is "a man of peace," despite the fact that he has directly ordered the murder of women and children on more occasions than anyone cares to remember. Indeed, Arafat has ordered the execution of more Palestinian civilians (he calls them "collaborators") than Sharon has.
Which, understandably, brings us back to Saddam. It may be, as Chris Matthews suggests with just a bit too much of a smirk that Iraqi nationalism and ethnic pride are forcing many Iraqis to overlook Saddam Hussein's evil and defend their nation in much the same way millions of Russians defended Saddam's reported hero Joseph Stalin. Of course, the Germans weren't invading Soviet Russia as liberators (though they were greeted as such by many in the Ukraine and elsewhere).
Indeed, to the extent such loyalty extends beyond the ranks of the Fedayeen Saddam and the Republican Guard we still don't know how many Iraqis are fighting from fear rather than loyalty I think it has more to do with what could be described as mass-Stockholm syndrome. So terrorized and brutalized have the Iraqis been, for so long, they scratch at the eyes of their rescuers.
GOOD RIDDANCE VS. GOOD FUTURES This is a tragedy.
The Arab world is a basket case, economically and politically (morality we can debate another day). One handy statistic: If you subtract oil, the total exports of the Arab world i.e., the 500 million people comprising all of North Africa and the Middle East, minus Israel amount to less than those of Finland: a country with one fiftieth the population. So convinced that some outside force imperialists, Jews, oil companies, America, the CIA is responsible for the failings of their once-great civilization, Arabs cannot handle any blow to their self-esteem. It's not so much dead Arabs which grates on their psyche but, the sting to their pride which comes when non-Muslim, non-Arabs do the killing. This is what makes smart people act stupid.
Indeed, this is hardly unique to Arabs. All over the world and throughout history national pride and cultural passions have driven nations to violence and folly. As Yale's Donald Kagan has written, "The common practice of calling such motives 'irrational' reveals how narrow the professional understanding of what matters to people has become in our day." He goes on: "The notion that only economic benefits, power and security are rational goals is a prejudice of our time, a product of the attempt to treat the world of human events as though it were the inanimate physical universe, susceptible to scientific analysis and free to ignore human feelings, motives, and will. Such an approach is no more adequate to explain current behavior than to explain the actions of human beings throughout history." (For more on this, see "Don't Kowtow Now.")
But if Arabs want to define their national interests in terms of pride and shame as NR's David Pryce-Jones has argued so eloquently that's fine; that's natural even. But that decision has serious costs. If the Iraqis side with pride and totalitarianism over realism and liberty; if the Arab propaganda machine and suicide-bomber networks decide that it would be better for Iraq to be a giant Lebanon free of Americans than to be an Arab Sweden with our help; if they decide that even one dead Iraqi at the hands of "infidels" is worse than 100,000 at the hands of Saddam; if they greet what can either beginning or the end of a rescue mission with bullets, then things will only worsen for the Arabs.
For that's what this is, a rescue mission. It may have been launched out of American self-interest, but that should make no difference to the Iraqis. And I still hope that the Iraqis will snap out of it and recognize we're there to help. Indeed, if they greet the U.S. with gratitude there really will be no end to American charity and assistance. We can point to Japan, South Korea, and Germany as evidence of the prosperity and decency we can help usher in. Al Qaeda, Hezbollah, Hamas, et al., can offer only Lebanon or some phantasmagorical Brigadoon plucked from the fantasies of jihadists. To those who can see clearly the interests of their children, this should not be a hard choice.
But it is a choice. If even after Saddam is gone, they shoot at the lifeboat and spit at its crew, America will simply confiscate the weapons we came for and leave. Many, many Americans will conclude that democracy cannot take root in Arab soil after all, and if they don't want our help we will say "to hell with them" as we did to the Somalis. We will strike deals with murderers and thugs whenever profitable and contain those murderers when not. To borrow a phrase from Le Monde, we will declare "We Are All Frenchmen Now" and we will let Arabs kill Arabs (and yes, probably Israelis too) because it won't be our business all because some desperate people are too proud to stop acting stupid.
I think this is very wrong, the parenthetical part, I mean. I can't envision it.
Tyrant dictators who are ruling the Arabs with iron fists are powerless against the Islamic fanatic movement. As we observe the radicalization of the Islamic world in the past 30 years, we simply elected to look the other way. That was because the culprit behind the radicalization of the Arabs and Moslems were our best friends, the Saudis who bought almost every Washington politician with their petrodollars. As a matter of fact, we (America & Israel) even tapped into this Islamic fanatic movements to our benefit. A good example, the first Afghanistan moujahedeen movement financed by the Saudis and the CIA, the Bosnian Moslem war supported by the Iranians, the Saudis, the Egyptians, and the US. The Israelis also did their foolish recruitment of fanatic Moslems (Hamas) to counter the Arafat PLO leadership. The Israelis bribed the fanatic Moslems by giving them money to build Mosques! Of course we all know that Mosques are the center of dissemination of hate against the Christians, and Jews.
As long as our leaders chose to ignore the real problem-that is FANATIC ISLAM, the RELIGION itself, there will be lots of tail-chasing.
A brief history for the young, and the uninformed: The oil prices were around $3 before the embargo of the early seventies. The Egyptians wanted their land back from Israel or they would go to war, and will they also threatened that the Saudis would cut their oil production in support. We failed to react to that demand, and once the Arab oil embargo started, the oil price went to $20, that instant wealth for the Arab rulers was channeled to capture old Islamic glory. They funded Islamic missions all over the world, converted American black prisoners by the drove, and started JIHAD on every continent on this planet. We looked the other way in fear of offending our friends the Saudis.
At this point of history, killing Saddam, or even Osama Ben Ladin is not going to do any good to reverse the tide of Islamic terrorism. The only way to achieve that is by:
1) Dictating to the Arab dictators to control their Mosques, and their media
2) Dictating to the Saudis that they are governing because we allowed them to live. Their money and power comes from us. They should stop ALL charities/Islamic missions or we will depose them and install a democratic government.
3) The same thing to Mubarak. We are feeding his hungry population with $2 billions per year. He either control the hate emanating from his clerics, and media, or he will be deposed.
4)Israel must kill Arafat, and recruit new leadership for the Palestinians (perhaps some American Palestinian intellectual). As long as this raghead is alive, we will always have problems. A new leadership with new vision can do wonders.
5)The Israelis, and the Americans MUST put their money were their mouth is. We should start MASSIVE economic aid to that region to illustrate to the man on the street that the new pro-west leaders are better for them. I hope some of the so called experts in Washington would get to read this post and adjust their thinking. Daniel Pipes should be tapped as an advisor to the national Security Council. His deep understanding of the enemies must be utilized. He can run circles around Condeliza Rice!
Thanks for the reminder. Too bad it's "they" ignore the axis of evil at "our" peril.
In other words, we should attempt to buy them off. Been there, done that and it don't work. For one thing, Arafat and his cronies shunted nearly all the bribe aid money into their own personal numbered Swiss bank accounts. For another thing, the Arab mind views this payoff scheme as weakness, pure weakness, and paying jizya to the Mohammedan overlords.
The Arab world is like the dog that bites the hand which feeds it, but licks the boot which kicks it.
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