Online Journal ISSN 2109-9618 /// دراسات الشرق الأوسط /// Etudes du Moyen-Orient… Revue en ligne
Tuesday September 7th 2010

FACTS, NOT JUST TALK

Hichem Karoui, October 16, 2001 (MMN) ; Palestine Chronicle; Middle East News Online.

So at last, it seems that the Bush government is now convinced that there will be no anti-terrorist coalition working unless an effort to keeping public diplomacy more efficient is consented. Still it is obvious that such well-purposed endeavor has to go beyond the old stiff positions of the administration, if it is to succeed. It must not sound occasional and just related to the current crisis. A real shift in the American tackling of some topics has to be felt. It is not enough, for instance, to say that: ” OK. Now Mr. Bush is rather favorable to the creation of a Palestinian state neighboring Israel”, for people cannot help but think: ” this is a reaction caused by the Sept.11 attacks.” Thus, forgetting that they were condemning that terrorist act as inhuman, some of them are now saying:
” After all, if such an operation caused that acknowledgment, so it is good! Another of that kind and we will have all our problems resolved!” And even if this is not exactly what the Bush administration was seeking, its late acknowledgment about the necessity of the Palestinian state, has only contributed to create more confusion in the Middle East.
Why the Americans have waited until they were hit to recognize the right of the Palestinian people? The question has been inevitably raised, and whatever Washington would say about a plan that was already under way prior to Sept. 11, there is little chance to persuade people. The wide spread idea is that since the US needs the Arabs to take part to the anti-terrorist coalition, and by the way, to justify the war against the Muslims of Afghanistan, Bush is ready to promise anything! Is it not significant that the Taliban are now perceived as ” Muslims ” and ” brothers” in most Arab countries, where they used to be labeled ” extremists”, and ” fanatics” by the media? Just one day prior to Sept.11, the Taliban were demonized in the majority of the Arab countries where they did not have any diplomatic representation, Saudi Arabia and U.A.Emirates excluded. Today, their plight under the bombs is making almost the whole Arab world-shedding tears in the official media! Something is wrong with that behavior? Not at all! This is just the reverse side of America’s own irrationality. The Arabs are actually sending to the Americans the image they got of them in the mirror of contemporary history: It is obviously a distorting mirror.
For so many years, the Arabs have been at odds with the American positions in respect of the Middle East conflict. And while their cause – the fight against the Israeli aggression against their lands- seemed the most justified in the world by all the moral principles recognized by the United Nations’ charter, the USA was not only ignoring it, but also supporting Israel’s continued aggression. The irrationality of such a behavior was incomprehensible to the Arabs, because for all what they were representing as 22 states and standing for, the USA rarely condemned Israel and its positions often expressed the untold intention to humiliate the Arabs.
Lately, the USA pushed that irrational endeavor to the extent of asking the Emir of Qatar to put more pressure on Al-Jazeera broadcasting from Afghanistan! If such an odd demand concerned an American company, wouldn’t that have caused a scandal in the country? What about freedom of information? Is it only good for the Americans and no good for the other nations?
Today, we are told: ” if Bush were asked to speak on al-Jazeera, he would consider that”! Of course! Not that CNN and the American media are not enough to communicate with people, but it seems that there is an increasing interest in ” public diplomacy”. However, maybe the Bush administration has understood at last that it is more decent and certainly more efficient to accord an interview to al-Jazeera than to ask for its censorship.
Still, there is a long way before the administration if it is determined to sell its vision of freedom and democracy to the Arabs. As Mr. Edward
P. Djerejian – assistant secretary of state for the Near East under G. Bush- put it lately: it is ” only if we are perceived to be not only talking the talk, but walking the walk”, that America can convince the Arabs.

Leave a Comment

More from category

Are Hamas and the US Ready to talk?

Middle East Studies Online Journal ( 2010) Volume 1, Issue No 2 Hichem Karoui Position Paper Abstract: Should the USA [Read More]

About Brookings’ Madrasas Assessment

Hichem Karoui Middle East Studies Online Journal  ( 2010) Volume 1, Issue No 2 A review Abstract: The report issued in [Read More]

Pullout

Hichem Karoui Middle East Studies Online Journal ( 2010) Volume 1 No 2. Abstract: A worse situation may follow the [Read More]

Way in, way out

Hichem Karoui The Gulf Today, August 14, 2010 The closer the date of the US military withdrawal from Iraq (August 31), [Read More]

Leaks of… innocence?

By Hichem Karoui    The Gulf Today  July 31, 2010 Since the release by WikiLeaks of a batch of 91,000 classified [Read More]

RSS Latest comments from The Gulf Today

  • Blair has much to teach his successors
    ‘I’m “so angry with Tony,” a disgruntled Labour leadership contender told me the day after the prime ministerial memoirs were published. “How could he have done this on the day the ballots went out?” The five candidates disagree on Trident, on tax and on much else. But on one thing, they’re united. Blair was foolish and disloyal to bring his book out now. So […]
  • Give the voters real choice
    This week will see the UK Parliament debate a bill to give the voters a referendum on electoral reform. It's 35 years since Britain last had a national referendum, and the one proposed for next May clearly hasn't had the most auspicious beginnings. In fact anyone expecting to have a real say in how the country is run is likely to be disappointed. T […]
  • Skin in the game
    I made a deal with my kids about their college educations. It’s very simple: I’ll pay half and they’ll pay half. How they pay for their share is up to them, but I match every dollar they earn in scholarship, pay for themselves or take out in a loan. When I tell other parents about this, some of them look at me like I’m Attila the Hun. “Unthinkable” their exp […]
  • Three pogroms held together by a common thread
    The accounts of murder, arson, and crimes against women sounded horribly familiar: Each detail, each grisly fact seemed taken out of a script enacted before; the sequence of events was as predictable as the shattering, gut-wrenching climax. The accounts of murder, arson, and crimes against women sounded horribly familiar: Each detail, each grisly fact seemed […]
  • ‘nuclear incident victims must get prompt compensation’
    While the Lok Sabha passed the Civil Liability for Nuclear Damage Bill, 2010, on August 25, the Rajya Sabha passed it five days later. In this context, Srikumar Banerjee, Chairman, Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and Secretary, Department of Atomic Energy (DAE), spoke to T.S. Subramanian on September 2 in Chennai. Dr. Banerjee answered questions about the Bil […]

Must Reads