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Whoever attacked
the World Trade Centre and the Pentagon, Muslims now
face the consequences
Tens of
thousands of people may have died in the attacks on
the World Trade Centre in New York and the Pentagon
in Washington on September 11. The identities of those
responsible for what was clearly a carefully-planned
and expertly-executed operation remain unknown, although
the FBI and other American officials are claiming to
have identified Arab contacts of Osama bin Laden as
involved. With most of America now baying for blood
and vengeance, sufficient evidence is likely to be found
to justify retaliatory attacks against convenient targets,
for example in Afghanistan. Whether this evidence is
any more substantial or genuine than the intelligence
that identified the al-Shifa pharmaceutical factory
in Sudan as a chemical weapons plant, and was used to
justify America’s bombing of it in August 1998, may
never be known.
The first
question on everybody’s minds is the obvious one: who
on earth could possibly be responsible for such an atrocity?
The answer to this, too, may never be known. The world
is assuming that the perpetrators were Muslims, be they
Afghani, Palestinian, Iraqi, even Chechens. That is
perhaps understandable, considering that Islamic movements
now constitute the main opposition to American and Western
global hegemony, and considering also the number of
areas in the world in which Muslims have been victims
of atrocities and brutalities committed by the US and
its allies and puppets. It may seem totally impossible
that any God-fearing person would commit such horrendous
acts; but we know from past experience that people who
feel themselves and their peoples to be under sustained
and unrelenting attack can react in the most unbelievable
ways. If Muslims were involved, it goes without saying
that there can be no possible sanction for their actions,
whatever a misguided few may suggest. Indeed, in view
of the teachings on the protection of innocents in time
of war, Muslims should probably be even more condemnatory
of other Muslims committing such crimes than of non-Muslims.
We should
also note that there are plenty of other enemies of
the West who could just as well be responsible, ranging
from domestic American dissidents like Timothy McVeigh
(who bombed the Federal Building in Oklahoma in 1995),
the traditional European and Japanese terrorist groups,
the anti-globalization movement (for whom the World
Trade Centre would be a prime target), and Latin-American
left-wing groups and drug cartels. When considering
such a totally unprecedented attack, the prior records
of such groups are no guide to who may be responsible.
Unfortunately,
uncertainty about the identity of the perpetrators is
unlikely to prevent Muslims from being blamed. Within
two days of the Oklahoma bombing, there were over 200
cases of hate crimes against Muslims in America. Following
the catastrophic destruction of TWA flight 800 off New
York in July 1996, special security measures aimed at
Muslims were instituted and kept in place even when
it was discovered that the crash had been caused by
mechanical failure. In the immediate aftermath of this
latest horror, there has been a similar rush to judgement
against Islam and Muslims. Groups such as the Islamic
Human Rights Commission, London, are already receiving
stories of Muslims in the US and other countries being
abused and attacked. Expecting the Western media and
commentators not to contribute to a mood of Islamophobic
paranoia is unrealistic; Muslims must be aware of the
dangers they now face and take precautions against them.
So, if
we cannot know who was responsible, what can we know?
Well, it seems clear that the attacks were intended
to strike at the most potent available symbols of American
power. The Pentagon is the nerve-centre of the US military
machine that projects American power around the world,
and the World Trade Centre was a symbol of the capitalist
system and elites whose interests that power is harnessed
to serve: legitimate targets, some might say, in view
of the West’s global record. In the case of the Pentagon,
the argument may be valid, in which case those killed
would probably be viewed by the perpetrators as — to
use a phrase coined by the US military itself — "collateral
damage". But however legitimate a target might
be, a hijacked airliner full of women and children can
never be a legitimate weapon.
However
unjustifiable and indefensible the attacks may be, they
are by no means inexplicable. The problem is that the
American people (and Westerners generally) are ill-equipped
to understand the probable motives behind them, the
reasons for so many people in the world hating America.
Of course, in the immediate aftermath of these horrific
events, a hysterical reaction among Americans is understandable.
The problem is that, once the initial shock has worn
off, the reaction is unlikely to be tempered. Numerous
commentators, newspapers and politicians have described
the attacks as "declarations of war," comparable
to the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. The
problem is that none of these people seem to realise
that America has long been at war with numerous peoples
all over the world. This is not the opening salvo of
a new war; it was most likely a successful attempt by
one of America’s many victims to hit back — very, very
hard.
Ideally,
this would be an opportunity for some reflective self-analysis
on the part of Americans — why, they might ask, do so
many people hate America so much? Is this what others
feel when the US takes military action against them?
If this is how one hard, sudden, massive strike feels,
how must the constant pressure of a brutal foreign occupation,
or of genocidal economic sanctions combined with near-daily
air attacks, feel? Is our intense desire for revenge
today precisely the same emotion that motivates other
people to attack us? In which case, might this not be
a good time for us to reconsider our role in the world?
Perhaps
a few people will be cool-headed and honest enough to
think like that. In Britain, the Guardian carried some
mature and reflective op-ed pieces this morning (September
12). But already those whose interests depend on maintaining
America’s global hegemony — whatever level of war that
may require against those people in various parts of
the world who would really prefer to control their own
affairs for their own benefit — are taking advantage
of this latest tragedy to demand harsh measures against
those who oppose American/Western interests. Their argument
is that democracy, freedom and civilization are under
attack and must be forcefully defended; such words ring
hollow from Ehud Barak, Ariel Sharon, Vladimir Putin,
George W. Bush, Colin Powell and Tony Blair, each of
whom has been responsible for far, far more death and
suffering than seen in the US yesterday. That, however,
will not prevent the CNN generation from swallowing
their line and supporting whatever actions they choose
to take.
What form
this American war against its perceived enemies will
take remains to be seen. But it will undoubtedly be
waged against Islam and Muslims, because the Islamic
movement is the West’s greatest challenge and this is
an irresistibly tempting opportunity for them to attack
it. Muslims should be prepared for military attacks
on our countries that may reach unprecedented levels
and massive crackdowns on Islamic opposition movements
in Muslim countries. Muslims living in the US and Western
countries can expect restrictions on their civil and
political rights, as well as even greater Islamophobia,
discrimination and hostility. Whoever may have been
responsible for the attacks in New York and Washington,
it is Muslims the world over who are likely to face
the consequences.
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