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Obama's Outreach to Muslims:
Empty Rhetoric, Same Old Policies
By Stephen Lendman
ccun.org, June 14, 2009
As well as anyone, Edward Said understood the West's
long-standing antipathy to Islam - reflected in Samuel Huntington's "The
Clash of Civilizations" article in the summer 1993 issue of Foreign
Affairs and later a 1996 book. He wrote that future conflicts
won't be "primarily ideological or primarily economic. The great divisions
among humankind and the dominating source of conflict will be
cultural....the principal conflicts of global politics will occur between
nations and groups of different civilizations. The clash of civilizations
will dominate global politics. The fault lines between civilizations will
be the battle lines of the future" - demagogically suggesting a
benevolent, superior West confronting a belligerent, hostile, inferior
Muslim world. In other words, good v. evil. Said called him and
others like him, "ignorant," a "clumsy writer," and an "inelegant thinker"
using a "gimmick" to suggest a "war of the worlds" pitting good guys
against bad ones. Post-9/11, it was easier than ever for America
to declare war on Islam, abroad and at home - a policy no different under
Obama than for eight years under George Bush. Empty rhetoric changes
nothing, in Cairo or elsewhere. Facts on the ground are clear,
unequivocal, and hostile - in Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Occupied
Palestine. Also toward Iran, Syria, elected Hezbollah Lebanese officials,
the legitimate Palestinian Hamas government, and targeted Muslim Americans
at home - for their activism, prominence, charity, religion and ethnicity.
It's the wrong time to be Muslim in America and most anywhere else in the
world. Around 1.5 billion Muslims want change and the basic
respect they deserve. In the spirit of noted US civil rights
activist, Fannie Lou Hamer, they're "sick and tired of being sick and
tired," colonized and exploited, targeted and slaughtered, vilified as
terrorists, occupied and oppressed, falsely charged, convicted, and
sentenced in kangaroo-court proceedings, imprisoned and tortured, or
viewed the way Edward Said explained in his noted book, "Culture and
Imperialism" - as "the strange (inferior, Orient, East, them)" v. "the
familiar (superior, Europe, West, us)." They deserve much better, yet
remain a political target of choice. Until that changes and
high-sounding speeches become policy, empty rhetoric will fall on deaf
ears. We've heard it before, yet the more things change, the more they
stay the same under Democrat and Republican administrations.
Obama's Cairo speech was profoundly disingenuous, much like others past
and more recently. He decried the "killing of innocent men, women, and
children," yet US forces slaughter them daily in Iraq, Afghanistan, and
Pakistan, and supply Israel with billions of dollars and the latest
weapons and technology to commit slow-motion genocide against millions of
Palestinians, deny their legitimate self-determination, and right of their
refugees to return home as international law demands. Also, Iraq
and Afghanistan remain occupied, the former with unchanged troop levels
for the duration if necessary and thousands more for the latter under a
new commander, general Stanley McChrystal, known for his brutality as
leader of the Pentagon's infamous Joint Special (death squad) Operations
(JSO). No exiting timelines are in sight for either country. Human rights
abuses and war crimes occur daily, and torture, extraordinary renditions,
and military tribunals remain official US policies as they did under
George Bush. America is a serial aggressor and abuser of binding
human rights laws. High-sounding rhetoric changes nothing. Obama claimed
America "did not go (to Afghanistan) by choice, we went of necessity....we
do not want to keep our troops in Afghanistan. We seek no military bases
there....Iraq was a war of choice (but) I believe that the Iraqi people
are ultimately better off without the tyranny of Saddam Hussein."
"Today, America has a dual responsibility: to help Iraq forge a better
future - and leave Iraq to Iraqis. I have made it clear to the Iraqi
people that we pursue no bases, and no claim on their territory or
resources. Iraq's sovereignty is its own. That is why I ordered the
removal of our combat brigades by next August (and) why we will honor our
agreement with Iraq's democratically elected government to remove combat
troops from Iraqi cities by July, (and) all our troops....by 2012."
Secret provisions in the Pentagon's 2008 Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA)
indicate otherwise. They flagrantly violate Iraqi sovereignty and
authorize the building of permanent US bases, camps, and prisons inside
the country. They immunize US forces, civilian security, and private
contractors from criminal prosecution. They assure Iraqi "democracy" is
illusory. Their officials have no say over US operations,
including incursions into other countries. They require Washington's
approval before concluding any agreements with other countries. Key Iraqi
ministries stay under US control, including defense, interior, and oil. No
timeline is stipulated for America's withdrawal. Conditions depend on
Iraqi force readiness, the removal of "security threats" in neighboring
countries (namely, Iran, Syria, Hezbollah in Lebanon, and Hamas in
Palestine), and national reconciliation (meaning a defeated resistance).
Unacknowledged is that America is in Iraq to stay, and the same holds for
Afghanistan. The historical record shows what Obama won't say.
America came to Japan in 1945 and South Korea in 1950, both close US
allies, and remained there ever since. Obama plans the same fate for Iraq,
Afghanistan and numerous other strategic countries where America intends
permanent occupations towards its goal of "full spectrum dominance"
globally, including by preemptive wars with first-strike nuclear weapons.
Obama also claimed he's "taking concrete actions to change course
(and) unequivocally prohibited the use of torture" at a time the practice
remains official policy and continues reprehensibly in US-run prisons,
including Guantanamo, and secretly in ones in other nations doing our
bidding. Obama said nothing about the millions of Iraqi deaths,
refugees, and mass human misery since the Gulf War, subsequent sanctions,
and 2003 conflict. He ignored the destruction of the "cradle of
civilization," subjugation of a sovereign state, and infliction of the
same fate on Afghanistan. He declared his support for democracy, peace,
human rights, mutual understanding, and social justice while bringing none
to the region and backing its most reprehensible tyrants. He
declared an "unbreakable" bond with Israelis and demanded that
Palestinians "must abandon violence." He acknowledged "more than 60 years"
of their pain and dislocation but was silent on its cause, the vast
slaughter and destruction from Operation Cast Lead, the daily incursions
in the West Bank and Gaza, the latter Territory under a medieval siege,
and the viciousness of a rogue occupier bringing death, destruction, and
human misery to a civilian population in violation of binding human rights
laws and norms. He referred to a "stalemate" pitting "two people
with legitimate aspirations" against each other in conflict. "It is easy
to point fingers," he said, but "the only resolution (for peace is for)
both sides" to accept a two-state solution as stipulated in "the road map"
leading solely to isolated bantustans after Israel seizes all valued land,
leaves worthless scrub patches behind, and ethnically cleanses large
numbers of Palestinians to bordering countries if they'll have them.
"The United States does not accept the legitimacy of continued Israeli
settlements," but supplies billions in aid to build them, opposes the
legitimate right of Palestinian refugees to return home, backs the
corrosiveness of a racist and belligerent Zionism, supports conflicts
against an occupied people, and rogue Mahmoud Abbas Fatah elements to
divide, conquer, and solidify Israeli hardline rule. Obama
mentioned nuclear weapons as another source of tension, "reaffirmed
America's commitment (for) a world" without them, acknowledged Iran's
right to "peaceful nuclear power," ignored Israel's nuclear arsenal
(likely 200 - 400 warheads), and so far as known, Iran's full compliance
with NPT. America and Israel are nuclear outlaws. Israel is the region's
most destabilizing force. America has that "honor" globally.
Overall, Obama proposed no concrete measures to redress decades of
Palestinian grievances, nor those of Iraqis, Afghans, Pakistanis, and
others in Eurasia - the region America covets for its vast energy and
other resource riches. He came, saw, spoke, made empty gestures
and no promises, except about America's permanent imperial presence in
partnership with Israeli rule. Obama puts a new face on long-standing
policy, but no change of America's global aim - for unchallengeable
dominance in this resource-rich part of the world with hardline militarism
for enforcement. The Arab street harbors few illusions that it'll be
otherwise going forward. Stay tuned. Stephen Lendman is a Research
Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago
and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog site at
sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global Research News Hour on
RepublicBroadcasting.org Monday - Friday at 10AM US Central time for
cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on world and national
issues. All programs are archived for easy listening.
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=13859
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