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Touch
the great shaytan and you can’t let go...
Can
the US be a
friend of the Muslims? This is not a rhetorical question; Muslims must
consider it seriously because it has enormous implications for their future.
First, a clarification is in order: when one talks about “the US”, one
does not mean the American people but the government, although it could
be argued that the 51
percent of Americans who voted for George Bush should bear some responsibility
for the crimes perpetrated in their name.
No
such distinction is made between people and the state when the US attacks those it perceives as its enemies. In Afghanistan, for instance,
some 20,000 civilians were killed by the US in the process of overthrowing
the Taliban; in Iraq at least 100,000 civilians had been slaughtered by
October (Lancet, October 29, 2004), and thousands more injured, tortured,
raped or imprisoned in concentration camps. This is in addition to the
estimated 1.5 million Iraqis who died as a result of twelve years of US-imposed
sanctions, ostensibly aimed at Saddam Hussain. The infant mortality rate
in Iraq has increased by 345 percent since 1989, according to UNICEF.
Such
horrendous facts must not be dismissed as mere statistics; these are human
beings who were condemned to death because they were deemed expendable
in the US’s rapacious
drive to grab others’ resources. When questioned about such crimes, US officials, lawmakers and most academics routinely dismiss
them as “history”. The victims’ families can be forgiven if they do not
find this acceptable. Nor is there any evidence that the US is willing
to abandon its murderous ways. In 1961, the US chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff conceived a plan, code-named
the Northwood Project, to blow up an American airliner, killing hundreds
of passengers, and blame it on Cuba as
a pretext for attacking that country. In 1963 a hitherto top-secret government
commission published a report, The Plain Mountain study, on the consequences
of lasting peace on American society. It found that peace may never be
possible; that even if it were, it would probably be “undesirable”. “Defending the national interest”, it reported,
was not the real purpose of war; war itself was a necessity and war deaths
should be planned and budgeted for. Similar attitudes are reflected in
the neo-conservative Project for the New American Century, which calls
for “full-spectrum dominance” and “perpetual wars”. These neo-conservatives
dominate the US political landscape today.
It
is not surprising, therefore, that the US military
budget accounts for nearly half of the world’s annual military spending
of US$900 billion. According to the UN, a mere 10 percent of the US military
budget would ensure everyone in the world received the essentials of life.
With 700 million people living below the poverty line worldwide, the profligate
lifestyle of the US is directly
responsible for this state of affairs. These statistics and inequities
should enable even the most simple-minded to understand that the US really
does not care for human life, a fact confirmed also by its wanton pollution
of the environment and destruction of the world’s natural resources. Its sole purpose is to grab whatever resources
it can, regardless of the suffering it causes to others. In this, the
US power elites behave even worse than beasts; the latter kill only when
they are hungry or under attack.
Despite
this grim reality, there is a serious gulf in the Muslim world between
those who claim the US to be
a friend and those who see it as an enemy.
The former group consists only of a tiny
westernised elite in our societies, including ruling parties and elements
of the military establishments, businessmen, academics, journalists and
others; the latter group consists of the vast majority of the populations
of every Muslim country in the world. Although largely discounted as ignorant
and irrelevant, the Muslim masses actually understand the US’s true
nature far better than the supposedly “enlightened” elites. Nor are Muslims
alone in this; most ordinary people around the world, whether in Central
and South America, or in Africa and Asia, have arrived at the same
conclusion. The US is hated all over the world not because others are jealous of its
“freedom and democracy”, according to Bush’s simplistic assertions, but
because it is arrogant, greedy, aggressive, ruthless and incredibly hypocritical.
The
Muslim elites have also got it wrong on another count: thinking that they
can have a relationship of equals with the US. The
US uses
its allies and then discards them; Saddam Hussain was a trusted friend
for decades until he outlived his usefulness; the Taliban were supported
by the US until
they became as an obstacle to its grand design. The Mubaraks, Abdullahs
and Musharrafs should take note.
The
friendship of the US comes
with a huge price-tag. Recipients of US largesse
end up becoming weaker and more dependent, and lose what little freedom
they have to determine their own policies and futures. Countries that
choose not to become vassals of the US may suffer
short-term hardships, but they gain in independence, self-reliance and
self-confidence. While it is sensible to avoid antagonizing the US more
than necessary, too close an association is more than just undesirable;
it is a recipe for disaster.
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