Posted on 09/21/2001 9:46:52 PM PDT by ouroboros
The Conformist Why They Hate Us Besides figuring out how best to respond, we ought to ponder why we were attacked last Tuesday. For George Bush and most of the media establishment, the answer is simple. We are the victims of unfathomable hatred from radical Arabs or Muslims, people who just hate freedom. "Freedom and democracy are under attack," is how the President put it. Others point more broadly to an implacable Islamic hatred of the West, a hatred that knows no reason. They, the Arabs, or Islamic fundamentalists, hate us for "who we are"or as one pundit asserted on Geraldo, they hate us because of our "separation of church and state." They are, it would seem, born that way. Few in the American political class question these bromides. Elsewhere, analysis is a bit more rigorous. On the BBC, commentators are not timid about underscoring the connections between the United States Mideast policies (and particularly its indiscriminate support of Israel) and Arab anti-Americanism. Indeed, that is often the centerpiece of their understanding. And why not? Islamic suicide bombers are not targeting Ottawa or Zurich, Paris or Romeall located in countries as free, democratic and "Western" as the United States, and all possessing as much or more "separation of church and state." So why us? Where to begin? In December 1998, President Clinton, hounded by the American conservative establishment over the diddling of Monica Lewinsky (theres an earthshaking issue for you!), visited Gaza, the poor desert strip on the brink, so it then seemed, of becoming part of an independent Palestinian state. The Oslo peace process was troubled, but very much alive. On the awaited day, thousands of Palestinians skipped work and school, lining Gazas dusty roads to catch a glimpse of the President. Five hundred members of the Palestinian National Council cheered lustily at Clintons speech, which contained moving references to the Palestinian history of dispossession and dispersal. After the death of Oslo weve had futile attacks on Israeli settlements, Palestinian homes bulldozed, political leaders killed from the sky, orchards uprooted. Per capita water usage (Gazas scarcest resource) is almost 7-1 in favor of the Israeli settlers. Cut to September 2000, as Ariel Sharon, accompanied by a thousand armed paramilitaries, trudges to Jerusalems holiest Muslim site to demonstrate Israels exclusive sovereignty. Hopes for a Palestinian state had by then been turned nearly to ashes. Sharons stunt predictably provoked Arab riots, which the Israelis suppressed brutally. The fuse was lit leading to Sharons election as prime minister. Meanwhile Americans elect a new president, who makes it clear that he couldnt care less about the Middle East peace process. Perhaps someone in the Bush White House reads intelligence reports (even newspapers would do) telling him how the Palestinians feel about confronting an Israel armed with American tanks, helicopters, missiles. Within months, teenage rioters with slingshots have given way to suicide bombers, and throughout the occupied territories there grows something like a public cult of the suicide bomber. In August 2001, Egypt sends its top foreign policy official to Washington with the warning that anger against the United States over the abortion of the peace process is rising so quickly that it endangers all American interests in the region. Survival of the regions "moderate" and "pro-Western" governments, including Egypts, is threatened as well. A pop song about foreign policy emerges on Egyptian radio: "America, America, people are in pain." In Washington, Cairos demarche is received politely, and brushed off. By then the American pundit class, operating in an eerie kind of lockstep, begins beating the drums for a new and "decisive" Israeli military action against the Palestinians. We have begun with Clinton and Gaza, but might have instead told the story of Americas Iraq policy, where the United States followed up its successful Gulf War campaign not by overthrowing Saddam Hussein and occupying Iraq (which risked more than a handful of American casualties) but by trying to embargo the Iraqi government into submission. The results: Saddams vicious regime survives, and UN officials estimate that more than a million Iraqis (half of them children) have died from embargo-related causes. This policy is now reviled in the Arab world, perhaps especially in those countries who allied themselves with the United States during the Gulf War. Lets assume that Osama bin Laden is behind the horrific terror, and has been plotting attacks against the U.S. for years. But surely the growing rancor toward the United States throughout the Middle East and Muslim world has crippled American intelligence capacities, deprived us of needed allies and potential warnings, and made the fight against the evil that much more difficult.
Scott McConnell
What a surprise!
Gee, and I thought Europe was a hotbed of terrorism in the seventies and eighties. That is where Munich, Vienna and Frankfurt, etc., are located, isn't it?
"After the death of Oslo weve had futile attacks on Israeli settlements, Palestinian homes bulldozed, political leaders killed from the sky, orchards uprooted."
There should be a shimmer dissolve between those two paragraphs, indicating a time lapse.
Because, during that paragraph break, Yassir Arafat was offered -- and turned down -- the Palestinians' chances to own half of Jerusalem and settle this thing once and for all.
The logical conclusion, for everybody but their apologists (like McConnell), the Palestinians don't want a settlement! They'd rather kill all the Jews, instead.
Once one understands that little nuance, everything else becomes perfectly clear.
Did Islam have a problem with Christianity and Judaism before the creation of israel?
yes
Thank you very much..
This wasn't the Islamic terrorists' first attack on America - it was simply the most successful and horrific in a string of Islamic terror, stemming back to the seizing of American embassy workers by Iran in 1979.
As awful as that hellish nightmare was for our hostages, held 444 days in what can only be considered "captivity," even then the wackos weren't deranged enough to execute them. Still, as events escalated and the perpetrators went largely uncaught or unpunished, they grew more daring.
Further, this wasn't their first attempt to bring down the WTC. The first was in 1993, during the presidency of their supposedly beloved Clinton. Yup, that's right, long before 1999, Monica, and a string of abuses in the Executive Branch under the Clinton Regime.
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