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 American Foreign Policy, 
	  Determined by Egotistical, Extremist, warmongers  
	 By Paul Balles Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 16, 2012 
 FODDER FOR EXTREMISTS 
 Four joint hosts of an MSNBC programme 
	  called Cycle decided to open a Pandora's Box and discuss some of America's 
	  problems in the Middle East.
 
 One of the participants attempted to 
	  draw a distinction between "extreme Muslims" and "moderate Muslims", 
	  suggesting that viewers should make such a distinction.
 
 That was 
	  with the caveat, according to another panellist, that moderate Muslims 
	  have an obligation to criticise the extremists.
 
 The panellists 
	  failed to realize how ludicrous that comment would sound to anyone with 
	  even a remote understanding of what's been the fodder out of which 
	  extremism--by any definition--has grown.
 
 According to Wikipedia, 
	  "Extremism is any ideology or political act far outside the perceived 
	  political centre of a society; or otherwise claimed to violate common 
	  moral standards."
 
 Quick to point to the difficulty of defining 
	  extremism, Wikipedia notes that "There is no political party that calls 
	  itself ‘right-wing extremist’ or ‘left-wing extremist’, and there is no 
	  sect of any religion that calls itself 'extremist’ or which calls its 
	  doctrine ‘extremism'."
 
 That there are any moderates at all can 
	  only be considered amazing. With half a million children killed during ten 
	  years of sanctions in Iraq, understandable hatred of America had to be 
	  fed.
 
 The outright, unjustified slaughter of Iraqis in the U.S. War 
	  and occupation --"1,455,590" based on non-existent WMDs--provided fully 
	  normal justification for extremist revenge by otherwise moderates.
 
 Add to those figures the victims of drone strikes in Afghanistan and 
	  Pakistan and Yemen, add the dead civilians in Libya, add the Palestinians 
	  victimised by American supported Israelis, add the Iranians hit by 
	  sanctions and threats of extermination and any reasonable person would 
	  expect moderate Muslims anywhere to become extremists seeking revenge.
 
 Unfortunately most Americans don't look at these facts as reason to 
	  be self critical. They tend to generally overrate their own importance.
 
 Paul Craig Roberts describes the attitude: "Americans are the 
	  'indispensable people', and the US is the 'indispensable nation' with the 
	  right and responsibility to establish its hegemony over the world."
 
 Roberts noted that Adolf Hitler called the same arrogant attitude ‘Aryan 
	  Superiority'. “Now Washington asserts the superiority. The neoconservative 
	  ideology threatens the world with nuclear war."
 
 The neocons 
	  responsible for prompting America to invade and occupy Iraq on falsified 
	  intelligence still exercise control over U.S. foreign policy.
 
 From any rational point of view, American foreign 
	  policy, determined by a cadre of warmongers in Washington D.C., reveals an 
	  egotistical extremist perspective.
 
 As extremist as that policy is, Americans seem 
	  unable to question it, challenge it or overcome their apathy toward it.
	  It's time for Americans concerned about extremists 
	  to begin looking in the mirror.
 
 According 
	  to John W. Gardner, author and past U.S. Secretary of Health, Education 
	  and Welfare, "Political extremism involves two prime ingredients: an 
	  excessively simple diagnosis of the world's ills, and a conviction that 
	  there are identifiable villains back of it all."
 
 Thus, Washington 
	  diagnosed the world's ills as a result of three "evils" that threatened 
	  Israel and America. Political extremism convinced the American public that 
	  Iraq, Iran and North Korea were the villains.
 
 The propaganda 
	  campaign inaugurated by the Bush regime was used to justify the deaths of 
	  more than a million Iraqis who were supposed to ignore America's 
	  terrorism.
 
 Commented Porter Goss, former congressman and CIA 
	  director, "The Iraq conflict, while not a cause of extremism, has become a 
	  cause for extremists."
 
 Two conclusions seem to escape the American 
	  public while remaining perfectly clear to the rest of the world:
	  The real extremists are America and Israel.  
	  Iraqis remain overwhelmingly moderate despite having cause for extremism.
 
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