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Obama Admits that Grievances Led to Violence in
the Middle East, US Policy in the Region Should Change as a Result
By Ramzy Baroud
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February
28, 2015
Obama’s admission not enough: US spin on Middle East violence
must change Truly, US President
Barack Obama’s recent call to address the root causes of violence,
including that of the so-called “Islamic State” (IS) and al-Qaeda was a step
in the right direction, but still miles away from taking the least
responsibility for the mayhem that has afflicted the Middle East since the
US invasion of Iraq in 2003. “The link is undeniable,” Obama said in
a speech at the State Department on 19 February “When people are
oppressed and human rights are denied - particularly along sectarian lines
or ethnic lines - when dissent is silenced, it feeds violent extremism. It
creates an environment that is ripe for terrorists to exploit.” Of
course, he is right. Every word. However, the underlying message is also
clear: it’s everyone else’s fault but ours. Now, that’s hardly true, and
Obama, once a strong critic of his predecessor’s war, knows it well.
Writing at MSNBC.com, Sarah Leah Whitson went a step further. In “Why
the fight against ISIS is failing,” Whitson, criticised the anti-IS alliance
for predicating its strategy on militarily defeating the group, without any
redress of the grievances of oppressed Iraqi Sunnis, who, last year welcomed
IS fighters as “liberators”. “But let’s not forget how Iraq got to
that point,” she wrote, “with the US-led Iraq war that displaced a dictator
but resulted in an abusive occupation and destructive civil war, leaving
more than a million dead.” Spot on, well, almost. Whitson
considered “displacing of a dictator,” as a plus for the US war, as if the
whole military venture had anything to do with overcoming dictatorship. In
fact, the “abusive occupation and destructive civil war” was very much part
of the US strategy of divide and conquer. Many wrote about this to the
extent that
that the argument itself is in fact, history. At least,
however, both arguments are a significant departure from the
pseudo-intellectualism that has occupied the larger share of mainstream
media thinking about terrorism and violence. Not only does the conventional
wisdom in US media blame the bloody exploits of IS on the region itself, as
if the US and western interventionism are not, in anyway, factors, at least
worth pondering. (In fact, for them US intervention is a force of good,
rarely self-seeking and exploitative.) Worse, no matter how they unravel the
argument, Islam somehow ends up being the root of all evil – a reductionist,
silly and irresponsible argument, to say the least. Also a
dangerous one, for it infers the kind of conclusions that will constantly
point the arrow to the direction of a self-destructive foreign policy, the
kind that has set the Middle East ablaze in the first place. But
that is not your everyday diatribe. The constant injection of all sorts of
bizarre arguments, like that of
Graeme Wood’s recent piece in the Atlantic, is aimed at creating
distractions, blaming religion and its zealots for their “apocalyptic” view
of the world. Wood’s argument, designed to be a methodical and detached
academic examination of the roots of IS is misconstrued at best,
disingenuous at worst. “That the Islamic State holds the imminent
fulfilment of prophecy as a matter of dogma at least tells us the mettle of
our opponent. It is ready to cheer its own near-obliteration, and to remain
confident, even when surrounded, that it will receive divine succour if it
stays true to the Prophetic model,” Wood concluded with the type of liberal
positivism that has become as galling as religious zeal. Mohamed
Ghilan, an Islamic law scholar
dissected Wood’s argument with integrity based on real, authentic
knowledge of both Islam and the Middle East region. “An analysis of what
ISIS is about and what it wants that looks to Islam as a causal source of
their behaviour is not only misguided, but also harmful,” he wrote.
“It obscures the root causes for why we have an ISIS, an al-Qaeda, an Ansar
Bayt al-Maqdis, and any of the other groups that have risen and continue to
arise. It creates further confusion and contributes to a rising Islamophobic
sentiment in the West. And when given the guise of academic rigor, it
accomplishes all of this rather perniciously.” Indeed, the age-old
ailment of hallow, lacking writing about the complex and involved reality in
the Middle East persists, even after 25 years of full American military
engrossment in the region. Since the first Iraq war (1990-91) until
this day, America’s mainstream intellectuals and journalists refuse to
accept the most prevalent truth about the roots of the current crisis; that
military intervention is not a virtue, that war begets chaos and violence,
that military invasion is not a harbingers of a stable democracy, but invite
a desperately violent polices predicated on winning, regardless of the cost.
Nonetheless,
that very
admission came from former United Nations Secretary General, Kofi Annan,
who, by virtue of his previous position should indeed be able to assess
the link between the US war on Iraq and the
current upheaval. Although he rightly blamed regional powers for
exasperating the conflict, he laid the blame where it surly belongs: the
Iraq war, invasion and the way the occupation was handled afterwards. “I was
against this invasion and my fears have been founded. The break-up of the
Iraqi forces poured hundreds if not thousands of disgruntled soldiers and
police officers onto the streets,” he said. That was indeed the
backbone of the initial home-grown resistance in Iraq, which forced the US
to shift strategy by igniting the powder keg of sectarianism. The hope then
was that the “disgruntled soldiers” of Iraqi resistance would be consumed in
a civil war inferno involving Sunni-based resistance against Shiite-based
militias, themselves working for or allied with the US and US-imposed Shiite
government in Baghdad. “The aim of creating democracy without the
existing institutions ushered in corrupt sectarian governments,” Annan said.
For Annan, the war and invasion come first, followed by the
sectarian-mismanagement of Iraq, also by the Americans, an admission that is
rarely echoed by US officials and media as demonstrated by the obstinately
deficient media coverage. One is rarely proposing to ignore
existing fault lines in Middle Eastern societies, standing sectarianism,
fundamentalism, brewing, unresolved conflicts, and of course the monster of
authoritarianism and corruption. None of this should be unheeded, if indeed
a peaceful future is to be made possible. On the other hand, the argument
that desperately seeks every possible pretence – from blaming Islam and
believers of some strange apocalypse to everyone else but the US and its
allies – is a poor attempt at escaping a heavy moral, but also political
responsibly. The danger of that argument lies in the fact that its
promoters don’t mind seeing yet another war, like the one that was visited
upon the Middle East a decade or so ago, the one that wrought al-Qaeda to
the region, and orchestrated the rise of IS, and the bloodbath that
followed. - Ramzy Baroud – www.ramzybaroud.net -
is an internationally-syndicated columnist, a media consultant, an author of
several books and the founder of PalestineChronicle.com. He is currently
completing his PhD studies at the University of Exeter. His latest book is
My Father Was a Freedom Fighter: Gaza’s Untold Story (Pluto Press, London).
***
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