Confronting Anti-American Grievances
By Zbigniew Brzezinski
(New York Times, September
1, 2002, Sunday)
Op-Ed 1253 words Late Edition - Final, Section 4, Page 9, Column 2
WASHINGTON - Nearly a year after
the start of America's war on terrorism, that war faces the real risk of being
hijacked by foreign governments with repressive agendas. Instead of leading a
democratic coalition, the United States faces the risk of dangerous isolation.
The Bush administration's definition of the challenge that America confronts
has been cast largely in semi-religious terms. The public has been told
repeatedly that terrorism is "evil," which it undoubtedly is, and
that "evildoers" are responsible for it, which doubtless they are.
But beyond these justifiable condemnations, there is a historical void. It is
as if terrorism is suspended in outer space as an abstract phenomenon, with
ruthless terrorists acting under some Satanic inspiration unrelated to any
specific motivation.
President Bush has wisely eschewed identifying terrorism with Islam as a whole and been careful to stress that Islam as such is not at fault. But some supporters of the administration have been less careful about such distinctions, arguing that Islamic culture in general is so hostile to the West, and especially to democracy, that it has created a fertile soil for terrorist hatred of America.
Missing from much of the public
debate is discussion of the simple fact that lurking behind every terroristic
act is a specific political antecedent. That does not justify either the
perpetrator or his political cause. Nonetheless, the fact is that almost all
terrorist activity originates from some political conflict and is sustained by
it as well. That is true of the Irish Republican Army in Northern Ireland, the
Basques in Spain, the Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza, the Muslims in
Kashmir and so forth.
In the case of Sept. 11, it does
not require deep analysis to note - given the identity of the perpetrators -
that the Middle East's political history has something to do with the hatred of
Middle Eastern terrorists for America. The specifics of the region's political
history need not be dissected too closely because terrorists presumably do not
delve deeply into archival research before embarking on a terrorist career.
Rather, it is the emotional context of felt, observed or historically recounted
political grievances that shapes the fanatical pathology of terrorists and
eventually triggers their murderous actions.
American involvement in the
Middle East is clearly the main impulse of the hatred that has been directed at
America. There is no escaping the fact that Arab political emotions have been
shaped by the region's encounter with French and British colonialism, by the
defeat of the Arab effort to prevent the existence of Israel and by the subsequent
American support for Israel and its treatment of the Palestinians, as well as
by the direct injection of American power into the region.
This last has been perceived by
the more fanatical elements in the region as offensive to the sacred religious
purity of Saudi Arabian custodianship of Islam's holy places and as hurtful to
the welfare of the Iraqi people. The religious aspect adds fervor to their
zeal, but it is worth noting that some of the Sept. 11 terrorists had
non-religious lifestyles. Their attack on the World Trade Center had a definite
political cast to it.
Yet there has been a remarkable
reluctance in America to confront the more complex historical dimensions of
this hatred. The inclination instead has been to rely on abstract assertions
like terrorists "hate freedom" or that their religious background
makes them despise Western culture.
To win the war on terrorism, one
must therefore set two goals: first to destroy the terrorists and, second, to
begin a political effort that focuses on the conditions that brought about
their emergence. That is what the British are doing in Ulster, the Spaniards
are doing in the Basque country and the Russians are being urged to do in
Chechnya. To do so does not imply propitiation of the terrorists, but is a
necessary component of a strategy designed to isolate and eliminate the
terrorist underworld.
Analogies are not the same as
identity, but with that in mind one might consider the parallels between what
the United States faces today in regard to Middle Eastern terrorism and the
crises that America confronted domestically in the 1960's and 70's. At that
time, American society was shaken by violence undertaken by groups like the Ku
Klux Klan (often in semi-autonomous klaverns), White Citizens' Councils, the
Black Panthers and the Symbionese Liberation Army. Without civil-rights
legislation and the concomitant changes in America's social views on race
relations, the challenge that those organizations posed might have lasted much
longer and become more menacing.
The rather narrow, almost
one-dimensional definition of the terrorist threat favored by the Bush
administration poses the special risk that foreign powers will also seize upon
the word "terrorism" to promote their own agendas, as President Vladimir
Putin of Russia, Prime Minister Ariel Sharon of Israel, Prime Minister Atal
Bihari Vajpayee of India and President Jiang Zemin of China are doing. For each
of them the disembodied American definition of the terrorist challenge has been
both expedient and convenient.
When speaking to Americans, neither Mr. Putin nor Mr. Sharon can
hardly utter a sentence without the "T" word in it in order to
transform America's struggle against terrorism into a joint struggle against
their particular Muslim neighbors. Mr. Putin clearly sees an opportunity to
deflect Islamic hostility away from Russia despite Russian crimes in Chechnya
and earlier in Afghanistan. Mr. Sharon would welcome a deterioration in United
States relations with Saudi Arabia and perhaps American military action against
Iraq while gaining a free hand to suppress the Palestinians. Hindu fanatics in
India are also quite eager to conflate Islam in general with terrorism in
Kashmir in particular. Not to be outdone, the Chinese recently succeeded in persuading
the Bush administration to list an obscure Uighur Muslim separatist group
fighting in Xinjiang province as a terrorist organization with ties to Al
Qaeda.
For America, the potential risk
is that its nonpolitically defined war on terrorism may thus be hijacked and
diverted to other ends. The consequences would be dangerous. If America comes
to be viewed by its key democratic allies in Europe and Asia as morally obtuse
and politically naïve in failing to address terrorism in its broader and deeper
dimensions - and if it is also seen by them as uncritically embracing
intolerant suppression of ethnic or national aspirations - global support for
America's policies will surely decline. America's ability to maintain a broadly
democratic antiterrorist coalition will suffer gravely. The prospects of
international support for an eventual military confrontation with Iraq will
also be drastically diminished.
Such an isolated America is
likely to face even more threats from vengeful terrorists who have decided to
blame America for any outrages committed by its self-appointed allies. A
victory in the war against terrorism can never be registered in a formal act of
surrender. Instead, it will only be divined from the gradual waning of
terrorist acts. Any further strikes against Americans will thus be a painful
reminder that the war has not been won. Sadly, a main reason will be America's
reluctance to focus on the political roots of the terrorist atrocity of Sept.
11.
Zbigniew Brzezinski was National
Security Adviser in the Carter administration.