BEIRUT, Lebanon – US Secretary of State Colin Powell is on a trip that will take him to several Arab states this week to discuss the situations in Iraq and Palestine-Israel, among other things. His departure was inauspiciously preceded by the publication of the results of a Zogby International public opinion poll in six Arab countries that showed a sharp and continuing slide in America’s standing among Arab citizens.
Powell’s trip is both heroic and tragic, because the very policy that he promotes leads to Washington’s ever more precarious standing in this region. Troubled as many of us are in the Mideast and the US by this widening gulf between our two societies, the evidence on the ground suggests no sign of change. Bitterness, anger and violence are likely to continue to define the interaction between American government policies and the sentiments of Arab public opinion.
The issue becomes ever more urgent in view of the continuing stream of statements, accusations, and threats in the US vis-à-vis Syria and Iran, because of those countries’ alleged secret plans to develop weapons of mass destruction (WMD). Washington also occasionally throws barbed darts at Hizbullah, Hamas and other non-state groups in this region, charging them with using terrorism or acquiring weapons that threaten Israel.
The problem that Colin Powell will encounter when he visits Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait and other Arab countries this week is that the vast majority of their citizens think very poorly of the US, largely due to Washington’s policies on Palestine-Israel, Iraq, and terrorism. In Saudi Arabia, for example, a naturally conservative society that adopts many aspects of American lifestyles and technology very easily, the approval rating of the US in the period 2002-2004 dropped from 12 percent to 4 percent. In Egypt the drop was from 15 to 2 percent, and in Jordan from 34 to 15 percent.
Wake up, Colin, and smell the qahwa: in Egypt and Saudi Arabia, the “pillars” of American strategic interests in the Arab World, respectively 2 and 4 percent of the populations have a positive view of the United States. When I played hockey on unevenly frozen ponds north of New York City as a reckless 10-year-old, this was known as skating on thin ice.
So, when the US State Department spokesman says, as he did Monday, that on his trip in the Middle East Colin Powell “will discuss with our close friends there the situation in Iraq, cooperation in the war on terror, the situation between the Israelis and Palestinians, the opportunities created by the Gaza withdrawal, and the issue of reform in the broader Middle East and North Africa,” he captures the intellectually bizarre and politically self-defeating nature of America’s engagement with the Arab Middle East. For it is precisely the US policy on all these issues that alienates the overwhelming majority of ordinary Arabs, and distances them from Washington.
The evidence continues to pour in, week after week, poll after poll: the five pillars of US policy in the Middle East are all seen by the Arab people of this region to be unfair and imbalanced, favoring Israel and autocratic Arab leaderships, and harming the sentiments and interests of ordinary Arabs who otherwise embrace most aspects of American life and values. The five pillars that all generate powerful anti-American sentiments are the Arab-Israeli conflict, the regime change and occupation of Iraq as part of the “war on terror”, calls for reform, support for non-democratic regimes, and threats against other countries or parties in the region for their alleged WMD plans.
Precisely whom is Colin Powell kidding? Who are America’s “friends” in the Middle East that he will engage this week? The truth is that he will be holding talks with Arab government leaders who enjoy limited political respect at home. Even more troubling is the reality that the US-backed policies of many Arab leaderships in recent decades proved to be the reason why so many angry young men in Cairo, Riyadh, Amman and Beirut turned to terrorism, and targeted their own governments as well as the US.
There is an unreal, almost fantastic, dimension to official American engagement with the governments and peoples of the Middle East. Washington feels it pursues a noble mission to bring peace, prosperity and democracy to the region; yet the vast majority of the people of this region vehemently reject and shun Washington’s policies. A dramatic example of this was the statement by Iraqi interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi – hand-picked and installed by the US – a few days ago here in Beirut, that Iraq would not normalize relations with Israel before the other Arab states did so. Allawi rejects the American-Israeli desire for Iraq unilaterally to establish normal working relations with Israel, presumably because he understands that the majority of Iraqis and other Arabs strongly oppose current American-Israeli policy to the Palestinians. America has no dearer Arab “friend” than Allawi — and yet even he cannot go along with America’s preferred policy options for Iraq’s ties with Israel. Wake up, Colin.
If Washington refuses to acknowledge that most of its Middle East policies elicit intense, widespread Arab opposition, it will continue to suffer the cycle of violence, war, occupation, and terror that now defines its engagement with the Middle East. Some Americans, though, do embrace reality more honestly than the present administration. The final report of the 9/11 Commission in the USA last week clearly pointed out the need for Americans to better see and understand Middle Eastern mindsets – specifically to recognize the political, social and economic issues that gave rise to the twisted mindset and worldview among small numbers of Arabs and Asians that ultimately led to the terror attacks of September 11, 2001.
Instead, we seem to witness failed business as usual in a make-believe Washingtonian world: a continuing string of accusations and threats from Washington against Syria, Iran and others, based on very thin evidence (reminiscent of the initial accusations against Iraq), along with a slightly mystical State Department perception of America’s Arab “friends” who share its values and its policy goals and means. Washington believes it can ignore the stunningly low, and steadily dropping, 2 and 4 percent favorable Arab public opinion perceptions of America. Iyad Allawi obviously feels otherwise. America’s man in Baghdad – like the 9/11 Commission report – is trying to tell something to Washington about acknowledging Arab public opinion and addressing its root causes, rather than ignoring it in a muscular show of disdain, and even racism.
Rami G. Khouri is executive editor of the Beirut-based Daily Star newspaper, published throughout the Middle East with the International Herald Tribune.
Copyright © 2004 Rami G. Khouri
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Released: 28 July 2004
Word Count: 1,074 words
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