Articles
Cairo December
13-14, 2003
Clearing
the Way for United States Israeli Imperial Domination of the "Middle
East"
Sherif Hetata
Paper presented
to the Second International Conference on United States Hegemony
and War
Cairo 13-14 December 2003
Introduction
I am writing
this paper in the living room of my apartment on Peaks Island, near
the coast of Maine in the northeastern corner of the United States.
From my window I can see the waters of the Atlantic Ocean calm,
and blue under the shining sun of this October month.
Farther away
at a distance of fifteen minutes by ferry ride is the small city
of Portland where I arrived at the beginning of September from Cairo
to teach at the University of Southern Maine. The course which I
designed is entitled "Breaking Down Barriers." It grew
out of my experience as a writer and a novelist, the realization
that true knowledge arises by abolishing compartments and destroying
dichotomies, out of my understanding of human solidarity, out of
the popular resistance to corporate militaristic globalization,
out of "Porto Alegre."
When I read
through the summary of the three conference topics, and the twenty
one issues for discussion listed below them, I wondered if there
could be a way of condensing them into something more precise and
more concrete to avoid getting lost in generalizations and abstract
discussions. But I decided to keep these observations to myself
realizing that in the process of preparation many things would be
crystallized and made clearer, to get on with my task and write
this paper about "Palestine and Supporting Resistance against
Israeli Occupation Encouraged by the United States."
The first question
that came to my mind when I started to think about "supporting
resistance" was whom are we going to support? "Arafat"
and those who are around him? Other factions of "Fath"
led by Abou Mazin more pliable to Israeli? The Popular Front for
the Liberation of Palestine? The Democratic Movement for the Liberation
of Palestine? The Islamic "Hamas" and "Jihad"?
Or the Palestinian people in general, for whatever that means, after
all the changes that have taken place on the Palestinian scene?
What solutions are we going to support? A "Palestinian State"
we say but what "State" and where and how? Can we continue
to repeat what is being said after the "Intifada" has
been snuffed out, after Sharon and Bush and the "road map,"
after the "global war" on terror and the occupation of
Iraq?
This paper is
an attempt to open up a discussion about support to the Palestinian
cause as related to the plans now being implemented by the United
States for "Imperial" domination of the so-called "Middle
East."
1. Making
the "Middle East" safe for Israel
"Kanan Makiya" an Iraqi who has lived in the United States
for many years is based in Georgetown University Washington D.C.
and is a member of the Iraqi National Council headed by Ahmed Chalabi.
Commenting on the projected war against Iraq a few months before
it was launched, he said
"The
removal of Saddam Hussein presents the United States in particular
with a historic opportunity that I believe is going to prove to
be as large as anything that has happened in the Middle East since
the fall of the Ottoman Empire and the entry of the British troops
into Iraq in 1917."
In 1996 a group
of neo-conservatives with declared Zionist leanings and links to
the Israeli Likud Party joined together to prepare a report for
"Benjamin Netanyahu" the Prime Minster of the Likud government
who had come to power in the recent elections. The group was headed
by "Richard Perle" a former Assistant Secretary in the
State Department when "Regan" was President of the United
States and a member of the Defense Policy Board which advises "Donald
Rumsfeld." It included "Douglas Feith" who is now
an Assistant Secretary for Policy in the Ministry of Defense, "David
Wurmser" from the International Association for Security Policy
Studies, its President "Robert Loewenburg," "Myrav
Wurmser," David Wurmser's wife from the Middle East Research
Institute run by retired Israeli military and intelligence officers
which includes as one of its functions the translation of the Arab
media and statements made by Arab politicians and statesman. "Jonathan
Torop" from the Washington Institute for Near East Policies,
as well as other high level political experts with overt Zionist
links.
The report was
prepared for the high powered Jewish Institute for National Security
Affairs (JINSA) which serves as a coordinating body for the activities
of the various Zionist organizations in the United States. Its recommendations
presented to "Netanyahu" were as follows:
1) To make
a "clear break" with the policies of negotiating with
the Palestinians and the attempts to exchange "land for peace."
2) Israel should shape its "strategic" environment by
weakening, containing and even "rolling back" Syria.
3) Iraq's future can be made to affect the strategic balance in
the Middle East profoundly.
4) The principle of "preemption "should be reestablished.
These guidelines
for Israeli policy are being put into practice by the present United
States administration under "George W. Bush," and by the
government of Israel under "Ariel Sharon." As regards
the principle of "preemptive strikes" it would not be
far fetched to say that it is in part "Likud" inspired
if we remember that the first "preemptive" strike on an
Arab country was directed by Israel against the Iraqi nuclear reactor
more than twenty years ago.
The presence
of a powerful Zionist influence in the American administration is
not new. However in the present administration high level posts
and influences have gained a striking ascendancy, and have eliminated
any Arab leanings to speak of, even though the "oil" connections
of the "Bush" family, of the vice president "Dick
Cheney," of the National Security Advisor "Condoleezza
Rice" and others continue to play an important role. Neo-conservative
Zionist politicians, experts and intellectuals today occupy key
positions. Top of the list comes "Paul Wolfowitz, " he
is the most influential of this neo-conservative Zionist group.
He is the deputy undersecretary to "Donald Rumsfeld" yet
is considered by many to be more influential than him. Others are
"Richard Perle," "Lewis Libby" Cheney's Chief
of Staff, "Douglass Feith," "Peter Rodman" and
"Dov Zakheim" who both occupy a sub cabinet rank in the
Ministry of Defense, "John Bolton" undersecretary for
arms procurements in the State Department. "Eliot Abrams"
an Iran Contra convict appointed by President Bush to be in charge
of Middle East Affairs in the National Security Council, "David
Frum" who coined the term "Axis of Evil" for Bush's
speeches. "James Woolsey" former head of the CIA and "Jeane
Kirkpartick" Reagan's Ambassador to the United Nations. The
last two with Richard Perle are members of JINSA. "Dick Cheney,"
"Douglas Feith" and "John Bolton" were members
of JINSA but left it when they entered Bush's administration. Also,
William Kristol the editor of the "Evening Standard" (owned
by "Rupert Murdoch" the Australian media magnate who owns
Fox News T.V. with over 100 million viewers), and a co-founder of
the neo-conservative imperial "Project for a New American Century."
All these high
level policy makers believe that United States interests in the
Middle East coincide largely with those of Israel and as a result
the policies of the present administration and the measures it takes
should be directed towards making the area "safe" for
Israel.
In the neo-conservative
strategy papers drawn up six years ago "making the Middle East
safe for Israel" meant "redefining Iraq" after "getting
rid of Saddam Hussein and his tyrannical regime," the transformation
of the Middle East by "redrawing its map," "regime
changes" of governments in the area not completely in line
with "American and Israel interests," "nurturing
alternatives to Arafat" and "the end of the Israeli Palestinian
peace process." The enthusiasm with which Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld
and others have adopted this stance means that the United States
is now throwing all its weight behind a "Pax Israelica,"
behind a total subordination of the Arab countries to the predominance
of Israel as part of a new imperial plan. It means that Bush's declarations
about two states, Israeli and Palestinian, or the "road-map,"
or other "non-proposals" of the kind are just smoke screens,
or maneuvers aimed at gaining time until "Sharon" has
done his job of "cleansing" Palestine, or of imposing
total subjugation on a Palestinian "Bantustan." Meanwhile
the United States thinks it can go on with executing the rest of
the neo-conservative plan for a permanent military presence in Iraq,
which will guarantee the flow of oil, with other "preemptive
strikes" against Syria (where Sharon has already directed a
"symbolic" raid), or against Iran, or any other country
in the area where disobedience might grow, or which could constitute
a potential threat to United States Israeli interests as visualized
by the rulers in those two countries.
Although all
these policy nightmares might appear to many people as exaggerated,
what has happened since the September 11 attack on the World Trade
Center (which gave the Bush administration the possibility to go
ahead with these plans) should alert the peoples of our region and
the world to how far the Bush administration is prepared to go.
"Pre-emptive strikes" in the concept of those who developed
them as a policy does not mean waiting until a country has developed
nuclear, biological or chemical weapons capable of what is called
"mass destruction." It means the right to strike at any
country which has "the potential" to eventually produce
such weapons, in other words at any country with a modicum of development,
since the production of chemical and biological weapons in particular
is not so difficult an undertaking. This is tantamount to declaring
that our societies will not be allowed to develop any further, nor
allowed to voice any opposition to the United States or else they
can become victims of "preemptive strikes." They must
remain "backward" and "obedient."
So after Iraqi oil has been privatized, the resistance of the Iraqi
people quelled (if that is possible) and a permanent military base
established the Bush administration can move on to another stage,
or is perhaps even hatching plans to begin it now. A report suggesting
military action against Syria was circulated and released three
years ago. The signatures on the report included "Elliot Abrams"
chosen by Bush to be in charge of Middle East Affairs. He will deal
"with democracy and human rights" in the region according
to his official job description within the National Security Council.
Signing with him were Douglas Feith (Undersecretary for Policy in
the Ministry of Defense), Richard Perle (Defense Policy Board and
JINSA board member), David Steinmann (chairman of JINSA), David
Wurmser and Michael Rubin (senior consultants to the Pentagon and
State Department on policies related to Iraq). All these men are
neo-conservative, Zionist supporters of Israel with strong ties
to Likud.
During the month
of August 2002 Richard Perle discussed a policy briefing presented
by a study group commissioned by the Rand Corporation. The final
slide in the presentation described "Iraq as the tactical pivot,
Saudi Arabia as the strategic pivot and Egypt as the prize."
On Monday 21
October 2003 Paul Wolfowitz the Deputy Undersecretary for Defense
received an award from the Centre for Security Policy chaired by
"Frank Gaffney" a notorious Zionist and neo-conservative.
In his speech Wolfowitz concentrated on the "war against terror."
Iraq he said had become a breeding ground for terror from which
it could spread to "countries around" and to many other
parts of the globe.
But things will
not stop at Syria or Iran. Next can come changes in the geopolitical
structure of Saudi Arabia, seizing of the oil fields and dismantling
the Organization of Petroleum Exporting countries. Then or perhaps
at the same time will come Egypt's turn, for Egypt with its population,
with it potentialities, although weakened considerably, is still
seen as a threat to Israel. Maybe a North Egypt, South Egypt divide
built on fomenting religious strife can be considered worth trying.
For then and only then in the minds of neo-conservative empire planners
can U.S./Israeli domination rule undisturbed and the Pax Israelica
become a fact of life.
What might appear
to us as only the fantasies of a neo-conservative group now in power,
and of the military industrial complex in the United States with
little social support within the country enjoys the full approval
of a sizeable, active sector of American society. Zionist circles
are now closely allied to a powerful fundamentalist movement which
has grown noticeably since Reagan was in power, more than twenty
years ago. This coupled with the relative passivity of a silent
majority in the United States which has not yet started to move
increases the dangers we face in the Arab countries.
The most zealous
Christian supporters of the Likud in the Republican electorate are
Southern Protestant, Baptist, Evangelical and other fundamentalist
followers. By the 1994 Congressional elections Christian conservatives
cast two of every five Republican votes. This religious right believes
that God gave all of Palestine to the Jews. Fundamentalist congregations
and fundamentalist business circles have collected hundreds of millions
of dollars to subsidize Jewish settlements in the occupied territories.
The Zionists in the Bush administration have helped to speed up
the growth of a messianic strain of Christian fundamentalism which
considers warfare between the Israelis and Arabs as ordained by
God, and complete occupation and domination of Palestine as a necessary
condition for the fulfilment of the Biblical "millennium,"
the End of Days, and the appearance of the Messiah who will rule
the world for one thousand years from Jerusalem.
These right
wing extremists exert a considerable influence in the Bush administration.
The result is that the Jewish fundamentalists struggling to impose
Israeli domination and the Christian fundamentalists working for
the so-called "millennium" strengthen one another and
increase the dangers of a religious war. They are allied for an
agenda which aims at implementing a vast imperial restructuring
of the Middle East, reinforced by the multinationals pirating for
oil and the tremendous powers exercised by people like "Bush"
and "Cheney" and "Condoleezza Rice" and the
neo-conservative Zionists nesting in the higher levels of ruling
power.
2. Whither
Palestine
Irrespective
of a few symbolic declarations from the Bush administration meant
to help justify the craven policies of Arab regimes obedient to
the United States in the eyes of the Arab peoples, and to encourage
the illusion that the "peace process" is still alive Sharon
therefore has powerful support from the United States. Only recently
on two occasions Negroponte the US representative in the UN Security
Council used the veto against two resolutions promoted by the Arab
States. The first resolution called on Israel to cease building
the "wall" separating between it and the scattered enclaves
meant to "imprison" the Palestinians on limited areas
of their land. The second was a resolution condemning the Israeli
aerial bombing of Syria. These vetoes have endorsed the collapse
of the "road map" comedy initiated by Bush. The building
of the "wall" or "fence" composed of an armored
zone of ditches, fences, sensors, and dirt roads for tracking footprints
goes ahead. It is twenty-eight feet high in places. It occupies,
steals and divides Palestinian farmland. It destroys Palestinian
villages, homes and livelihoods. It costs one million dollars for
each mile.
Only recently during the third week of October there were two simultaneous
raids on "Rafah" separated by two days, the biggest raids
since many months. The first killed eight people two of whom were
children and made one hundred homeless. The second killed another
eight people, wounded a hundred and destroyed 1000 homes by bulldozers
or rockets and made one thousand people homeless. The Israelis in
order to clear space between the "fence" and "Rafah"
had already previously razed 620 homes to the ground.
Only recently
the Herut offspring minister in Sharon's cabinet named "Ehud
Olmert" proposed that "Yassir Arafat" be assassinated
to be rid of him once and for all. And on September 16, 2003 the
United States vetoed a UN Secretary Council resolution asking Israel
to desist from its threats to deport him. Israel continues to build
new settlements or expand old ones, to change the face of Jerusalem.
Palestinians are being steadily corralled into shrinking Bantustans
and made to subsist on grossly inadequate European or other aid.
As the days
go by it has become clear that Sharon has no intention of dismantling
the settlements and handing back occupied territory to the Palestinians.
There are a quarter of a million heavily armed, and heavily subsidized
Israeli settlers in these territories and their numbers are growing.
Most of these settlers are prepared to kill if they are asked to
move and many of them are hard headed fundamentalists with a terrorist
strain. Israel has consistently and blatantly refused to respect
UN resolutions asking her to withdraw from "Occupied Territories."
Israel is also the only Middle Eastern State known to posses genuine
and lethal weapons of mass destruction. Israel under Sharon has
decided to keep control of the "Occupied Territories,"
and to get rid of the overwhelming majority of the Arab Palestinian
population either by violence and forcible expulsion, or by depriving
them of any means of livelihood so that in the face of starvation
they chose to leave. Israel knows that with the Iraqi war the United
States under Bush has finally decided to destabilize the Middle
East and reconfigure the region in a manner that would be favorable
to her.
If there are
still people who think that "Sharon's" ethnic plans are
unthinkable they should try to follow the steady erosion of opposition
to these plans during the past years within Israel itself and which
gives him a freehand. They should also remember the steady increase
in land settlements and land seizures over the past twenty five
years and the many statements made by right wing Israeli politicians
and generals occupying the front scene some of whom are in the government
today.
So thinking
of all this, despite what Arab newspapers and ruling or opposition
Arab politicians maintain would it be a fool hardy thing to say
that the so called peace process is in its death throes. And if
so back comes the question I asked at the beginning of this paper:
"What does support to Palestinian Resistance concretely mean
at this stage?"
3. Will Bush
and Sharon succeed?
Much of what
I have written in the previous pages arose from two considerations.
The first is the need to be fully aware of what the new-conservative
United States government now in power is planning for our region,
of how serious the dangers are and so correctly asses the magnitude
of the forces our people face. The second is to discuss the issue
of support to the Palestinian Resistance as related to the more
total situation so that we realize the need for careful thought
and a comprehensive approach.
Maybe the previous pages have painted a rather bleak and frightening
picture of what the peoples of our region face. One of the components
of this picture is the existence of a growing Islamic fundamentalist
force and the role it is playing in Palestinian resistance to Israel
and probably in the Iraqi peoples resistance to United States occupation
of Iraq. But I prefer to leave this issue so that this paper does
not become longer than it already is, and because it is an issue
that needs to be dealt with on its own.
I realize that
such a bleak and rather frightening picture can become counter productive
in the struggle against the neo-imperialists forces we face. These
forces are intent on convincing people that they are so powerful,
so overwhelming that there is no use trying to resist. If they succeed
in doing so truly all is lost. But more and more people all over
the world have become, or are becoming convinced that resistance
is desirable, and possible, and that their resistance sooner or
later will prevail.
People who think
that way do not limit themselves to remembering the massive pre-war
demonstrations that broke out before the Untied States and the United
Kingdom launched their attack against Iraq. On 25 October, 2003
a new wave of demonstrations swept through the streets in countries
including the United States.
Since what is
happening in the United States will have an important effect on
future events in the Middle East I will try to summarize what may
be its more important aspects.
"Bush"
was hoping that resistance to his aggressive policies would be vanquished
by the exercise of overwhelming military force first in Afghanistan
but more important in Iraq. Once the Iraqi army was crushed the
United States occupation forces would be able to destroy, to coerce
or to bribe any potential resistance. Then the United States administration
could move on quickly to privatizing Iraqi oil and with its next
"major
theatre" wars against Syria, Iran, North Korea, and others.
But things have
not worked out that way. What is happening in Afghanistan is largely
surrounded by silence. The truth is that apart from "Kabul"
the occupation forces control nothing. The rest is divided up among
the warlords, but more significant is the fact that the "Taliban"
are steadily regaining control of important parts of the land they
had lost, and that the United States forces there are facing something
akin to the war of attrition that sapped the life blood out of the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan.
However the
more pressing problem is Iraq. With 150,000 troops stationed in
the country, attacks against the occupation forces are spreading,
control is loosening and difficulties are increasing everyday. American
families are losing their "sons." General Anthony Zein
former head of the Central Command of U.S. military forces asks
"Are we facing another Vietnam?" as the "resistance
fighters" gain more experience and versatility, and as popular
resistance expresses itself in a variety of ways. Some of these
"fighters" may be coming from other places, some of them
may be fundamentalists but the majority come from the ranks of the
Iraqi people who for so long have had it the hard way. The chances
of an early withdrawal, of the "boys" coming home are
becoming more and more remote as the period of active service for
the troops is continuously extended. A month or so ago a small item
appeared in the "New York Times" announcing that new forces
would be recruited for the National Guard and the Reserves which
are drawn upon for the Iraqi occupation forces.
With a total
national deficit which has reached almost half a trillion (500 milliard
dollars) the "Bush" administration is asking for an extra
87 billion dollars for "Emergency Spending" on Iraq and
Afghanistan . This is in addition to the first installment of 75
billion dollars agreed to previously by Congress . The occupation
of Iraq costs 6 billion dollars a months shouldered by American
taxpayers in a situation where they face growing economic difficulties.
In 2002 the number of unemployed rose by 1,350,000 and the number
of those who were no longer covered by health insurance increased
by two million, at a time where the rich are made to pay less taxes.
All these factors
combined with a rapid loss of whatever civil liberties and democratic
rights were enjoyed by American citizens has reflected itself in
recent "opinion polls" which show that in the past six
months those supporting the "war policies" of the Bush
administration have dropped from 70% to 49%.
The "Bush"
administration is therefore facing mounting pressures which make
a military blow against Syria or Iran more unlikely although some
neo-conservatives in the administration seem to think that the policy
of the "worst" gives them a freer hand to follow the path
they have chosen. Besides Israel is always there to act as a proxy
with full United States support.
4. How can
we support the resistance of the Palestinian people to Israel aggression
and occupation of their land?
It is not easy
for me to find what I feel are suitable answers to this question.
By the word suitable I mean concrete practical and applicable suggestions
for a situation which has become more and more difficult and complex
as the days go by.
1. The main
problem we face in the Arab countries stems from the weakness,
dispersion and division of popular progressive forces, from the
fact that there is no organized democratic movement. If we want
to support Palestinian resistance how can we do that if we are
not capable of making changes at home in the corrupt dictatorial
regimes allied to the Untied States that dominate and control?
Effective support to the Palestinian people can only be a function
of what we do at home. So in a way the best support we can give
is to engage in effective struggle against our own regimes.
2. We have
to reinforce our ties with Palestinian movements, associations,
civil liberties organizations engaged in one or other forms of
resistance in occupied Palestine, including assistance in facing
problems of livelihood, health, services etc. Wherever communities
or groups of Palestinians are living in exile (the diaspora) we
should strengthen our ties to them especially with those living
in Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt, etc. We must break through the
barriers created between Arabs in the different countries of the
region and Palestinians.
3. Work toward
setting up Arab Palestinian Solidarity Organizations and find
out from the Palestinians themselves how best we can assist.
4. Examine
the possibility of a "go to Palestine" popular movement
so as to increase the buffer effect, and internationalize the
internal resistance in Palestine.
5. Analyze
and reexamine the results of the anti-war, anti-corporate globalization
demonstrations so as to combine them with more permanent, organized,
daily forms of resistance aimed at pressurizing, paralyzing, or
dismantling our regimes and enforcing democratic changes within
them.
6. Discussing
problems related to
a. Armed
resistance
b. Terrorism and its concepts.
Sherif Hetata
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