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4 June 2009
Once you strip away the mujamalat - the courtesies exchanged
between guest and host - the substance of President Obama's
speech in Cairo indicates there is likely to be little real
change in US policy. It is not necessary to divine Obama's
intentions - he may be utterly sincere and I believe he is. It
is his analysis and prescriptions
that in most regards maintain flawed American policies intact.
Though he pledged to "speak the truth as best I can", there was
much the president left out. He spoke of tension between
"America and Islam" - the former a concrete specific place, the
latter a vague construct subsuming peoples, practices, histories
and countries more varied than similar.
Labelling America's "other" as a nebulous and all-encompassing
"Islam" (even while professing rapprochement and respect) is a
way to avoid acknowledging what does in fact unite and mobilise
people across many Muslim-majority countries: overwhelming
popular opposition to increasingly intrusive and violent
American military, political and economic interventions in many
of those countries.
This opposition - and the resistance it generates - has now
become for supporters of those interventions, synonymous with
"Islam".
It was disappointing that Obama recycled his predecessor's
notion that "violent extremism" exists in a vacuum, unrelated to
America's (and its proxies') exponentially greater use of
violence before and after September 11, 2001. He dwelled on the
"enormous trauma" done to the US when almost 3,000 people were
killed that day, but spoke
not one word about the hundreds of thousands of orphans and
widows left in Iraq - those whom
Munathar al-Zaidi's flying shoe forced Americans to remember
only for a few seconds last year. He ignored the dozens of
civilians who die each week in the "necessary" war in
Afghanistan, or the millions of refugees fleeing the US-invoked
escalation in Pakistan. As
President George Bush often did,
Obama affirmed that it is only a violent minority that
besmirches the name of a vast and "peaceful" Muslim majority.
But he seemed once again to implicate all Muslims as suspect
when he warned, "The sooner the extremists are isolated and
unwelcome in Muslim communities, the sooner we will all be
safer."
Nowhere were these blindspots more apparent than his statements
about Palestine/Israel. He gave his audience a detailed lesson
on the Holocaust and explicitly
used it as a justification for the creation of Israel. "It is
also undeniable," the president said, "that the
Palestinian people - Muslims and
Christians – have suffered in pursuit of a homeland. For more
than sixty years they have endured the pain of dislocation."
Suffered in pursuit of a homeland? The pain of dislocation? They
already had a homeland. They suffered from being ethnically
cleansed and dispossessed of it and prevented from returning on
the grounds that they are from the wrong ethno-national group.
Why is that still so hard to say?
He lectured Palestinians that
"resistance through violence and killing is wrong and does not
succeed". He warned them that "It is a sign of neither courage
nor power to shoot rockets at sleeping children, or to blow up
old women on a bus. That is not how moral authority is claimed;
that is how it is surrendered." (Note: the last
suicide attack targeting
civilians by a Palestinian occurred in 2004)
Fair enough, but did Obama really imagine that such words would
impress an Arab public that watched in horror as
Israel slaughtered 1,400 people
in Gaza last winter, including
hundreds of sleeping, fleeing or terrified children, with
American-supplied weapons? Did he think his listeners would not
remember that the number of Palestinian and Lebanese civilians
targeted and killed by Israel has
always far exceeded by orders of magnitude the number of
Israelis killed by Arabs
precisely because of the American arms he has pledged to
continue giving Israel with no accountability.
Amnesty
International recently confirmed what Palestinians long
knew: Israel broke the negotiated ceasefire when it attacked
Gaza last November 4, prompting retaliatory rockets that killed
no Israelis until after
Israel launched its much bigger attack on Gaza. That he
continues to remain silent about what happened in Gaza, and
refuses to hold Israel accountable demonstrates anything but a
commitment to full truth-telling. Some people are prepared to
give Obama a pass for all this because he is at last talking
tough on Israeli settlements in
the occupied West Bank. In Cairo, he said: "The United States
does
not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli settlements. This
construction violates previous agreements and undermines efforts
to achieve peace. It is time for these settlements to stop."
These carefully chosen words focus only on continued
construction, not on the existence of the settlements
themselves; they are entirely compatible with the
peace process industry consensus
that existing settlements will remain where they are for ever.
This raises the question of where Obama thinks he is going. He
summarized Palestinians' "legitimate aspirations" as being the
establishment of a "state". This has become a convenient slogan
to that is supposed to replace for Palestinians their pursuit of
rights and justice that
the proposed state actually denies. Obama is already on record
opposing Palestinian refugees'
right to return home, and has never supported the right of
Palestinian citizens of Israel to live free from racist and
religious incitement, persecution and practices fanned by
Israel's highest office holders and written into its laws. He
may have more determination than his predecessor but he remains
committed to an unworkable two-state "vision" aimed not at
restoring Palestinian rights, but preserving Israel as an
enclave of Israeli Jewish privilege. It is a dead end.
There was one sentence in his speech I cheered for and which he
should heed: "Given our interdependence, any world order that
elevates one nation or group of
people over another will inevitably fail."
Ali Abunimah is co-founder of The
Electronic Intifada
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/jun/04/barack-obama-middleeast |