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maandag 7 februari 2011

Arab Regimes 135

Tariq Ramadan and Slavoj Zizek on the Future of Egyptian Politics (Video)

The revolutionary chants on the streets of Egypt have resonated around the world, but with a popular uprising without a clear direction and an unpopular leader refusing to concede, Egypt's future hangs in the balance. Riz Khan talks to Muslim scholar Tariq Ramadan and Slovenian philosopher Slavoj Zizek about the power of popular dissent, the limits of peaceful protest and the future of Egyptian politics.

Tom Engelhardt 7

        Tomgram: Engelhardt, Goodbye to All That


Pox Americana
Driving Through the Gates of Hell and Other American Pastimes in the Greater Middle East

By Tom Engelhardt

As we've watched the dramatic events in the Middle East, you would hardly know that we had a thing to do with them.  Oh yes, in the name of its War on Terror, Washington had for years backed most of the thuggish governments now under siege or anxious that they may be next in line to hear from their people.  When it came to Egypt in particular, there was initially much polite (and hypocritical) discussion in the media about how our "interests" and our "values" were in conflict, about how far the U.S. should back off its support for the Mubarak regime, and about what a “tightrope” the Obama administration was walking.  While the president and his officials flailed, the mildest of questions were raised about how much we should chide our erstwhile allies, or encourage the massed protestors, and about whether we should “take sides” (as though we hadn’t done so decisively over the last decades).
With popular cries for “democracy” and “freedom” sweeping through the Middle East, it’s curious to note that the Bush-era’s now-infamous “democracy agenda” has been nowhere in sight.  In its brief and disastrous life, it was used as a battering ram for regimes Washington loathed and offered as a soft pillow of future possibility to those it loved.
Still, make no mistake, there’s a story in a Washington stunned and "blindsided," in an administration visibly toothless and in disarray as well as dismayed over the potential loss of its Egyptian ally, “the keystone of its Middle Eastern policy,” that’s so big it should knock your socks off.  And make no mistake: part of the spectacle of the moment lies in watching that other great power of the Cold War era finally head ever so slowly and reluctantly for the exits.  You know the one I’m talking about.  In 1991, when the Soviet Union disappeared and the United States found itself the last superpower standing, Washington mistook that for a victory most rare.  In the years that followed, in a paroxysm of self-satisfaction and amid clouds of self-congratulation, its leaders would attempt nothing less than to establish a global Pax Americana.  Their breathtaking ambitions would leave hubris in the shade.
The results, it's now clear, were no less breathtaking, even if disastrously so.  Almost 20 years after the lesser superpower of the Cold War left the world stage, the “victor” is now lurching down the declinist slope, this time as the other defeated power of the Cold War era.
So don’t mark the end of the Cold War in 1991 as our conventional histories do.  Mark it in the early days of 2011, and consider the events of this moment a symbolic goodbye-to-all-that for the planet’s “sole superpower.”
Abroads, Near and Far
The proximate cause of Washington’s defeat is a threatened collapse of its imperial position in a region that, ever since President Jimmy Carter proclaimed his Carter Doctrine in 1980, has been considered the crucible of global power, the place where, above all, the Great Game must be played out.  Today, “people power” is shaking the “pillars” of the American position in the Middle East, while -- despite the staggering levels of military might the Pentagon still has embedded in the area -- the Obama administration has found itself standing by helplessly in grim confusion.
As a spectacle of imperial power on the decline, we haven’t seen anything like it since 1989 when the Berlin Wall came down.  Then, too, people power stunned the world.  It swept like lightning across the satellite states of Eastern Europe, those “pillars” of the old Soviet empire, most of which had (as in the Middle East today) seemed quiescent for years.
It was an invigorating time.  After all, such moments often don’t come once in a life, no less twice in 20 years.  If you don’t happen to be in Washington, the present moment is proving no less remarkable, unpredictable, and earthshaking than its predecessor.
Make no mistake, either (though you wouldn’t guess it from recent reportage): these two moments of people power are inextricably linked.  Think of it this way: as we witness the true denouement of the Cold War, it’s already clear that the "victor" in that titanic struggle, like the Soviet Union before it, mined its own positions and then was forced to watch with shock, awe, and dismay as those mines went off.
Among the most admirable aspects of the Soviet collapse was the decision of its remarkable leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, not to call the Red Army out of its barracks, as previous Soviet leaders had done in East Germany in 1953, Hungary in 1956, and Prague in 1968.  Gorbachev’s conscious (and courageous) choice to let the empire collapse rather than employ violence to try to halt the course of events remains historically little short of unique.
Today, after almost two decades of exuberant imperial impunity, Washington finds itself in an uncomfortably unraveling situation.  Think of it as a kind of slo-mo Gorbachev moment -- without a Gorbachev in sight.
What we’re dealing with here is, in a sense, the story of two “abroads.”  In 1990, in the wake of a disastrous war in Afghanistan, in the midst of a people’s revolt, the Russians lost what they came to call their “near abroad,” the lands from Eastern Europe to Central Asia that had made up the Soviet Empire.  The U.S., being the wealthier and stronger of the two Cold War superpowers, had something the Soviets never possessed.  Call it a “far abroad.”  Now, in the midst of another draining, disastrous Afghan war, in the face of another people’s revolt, a critical part of its far abroad is being shaken to its roots.
In the Middle East, the two pillars of American imperial power and control have long been Egypt and Saudi Arabia -- along, of course, with obdurate Israel and little Jordan.  In previous eras, the chosen bulwarks of “stability” and “moderation,” terms much favored in Washington, had been the Shah of Iran in the 1960s and 1970s (and you remember his fate), and Saddam Hussein in the 1980s (and you remember his fate, too).  In the larger region the Bush administration liked to call “the Greater Middle East” or “the arc of instability,” another key pillar has been Pakistan, a country now in destabilization mode under the pressure of a disastrous American war in Afghanistan.
And yet, without a Gorbachevian bone in its body, the Obama administration has still been hamstrung.  While negotiating madly behind the scenes to retain power and influence in Egypt, it is not likely to call the troops out of the barracks.  American military intervention remains essentially inconceivable.   Don’t wait for Washington to send paratroopers to the Suez Canal as those fading imperial powers France and England tried to do in 1956.  It won’t happen.  Washington is too drained by years of war and economic bad times for that.
Facing genuine shock and awe (the people’s version), the Obama administration has been shaken.  It has shown itself to be weak, visibly fearful, at a loss for what to do, and always several steps behind developing events.  Count on one thing: its officials are already undoubtedly worried about a domestic political future in which the question (never good for Democrats) could be: Who lost the Middle East?  In the meantime, their oh-so-solemn, carefully calibrated statements, still in command mode, couched in imperial-speak, and focused on what client states in the Middle East must do, might as well be spoken to the wind.  Like the Cheshire Cat’s grin, only the rhetoric of the last decades seems to be left.
The question is: How did this happen?  And the answer, in part, is: blame it on the way the Cold War officially ended, the mood of unparalleled hubris in which the United States emerged from it, and the unilaterialist path its leaders chose in its wake.
Let’s do a little reviewing.
Second-Wave Unilateralism
When the Soviet Union dissolved, Washington was stunned -- the collapse was unexpected despite all the signs that something monumental was afoot -- and then thrilled.  The Cold War was over and we had won.  Our mighty adversary had disappeared from the face of the Earth.
It didn’t take long for terms like “sole superpower” and “hyperpower” to crop up, or for dreams of a global Pax Americana to take shape amid talk about how our power and glory would outshine even the Roman and British empires.  The conclusion that victory -- as in World War II -- would have its benefits, that the world was now our oyster, led to two waves of American “unilateralism” or go-it-alone-ism that essentially drove the car of state directly toward the nearest cliff and helped prepare the way for the sudden eruption of people power in the Middle East.
The second of those waves began with the fateful post-9/11 decision of George W. Bush, Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and company to “drain the global swamp” (as they put it within days of the attacks in New York and Washington).  They would, that is, pursue al-Qaeda (and whomever else they decided to label an enemy) by full military means.  That included the invasion of Afghanistan and the issuing of a with-us-or-against-us diktat to Pakistan, which reportedly included the threat to bomb that country “back to the Stone Age.”  It also involved a full-scale militarization, Pentagonization, and privatization of American foreign policy, and above all else, the crushing of Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and the occupation of his country.  All that and more came to be associated with the term “unilateralism,” with the idea that U.S. military power was so overwhelming Washington could simply go it alone in the world with any “coalition of the billing” it might muster and still get exactly what it wanted.
That second wave of unilateralism, now largely relegated to the memory hole of history by the mainstream media, helped pave the way for the upheavals in Tunisia, Egypt, and possibly elsewhere.  As a start, from Pakistan to North Africa, the Bush administration’s Global War on Terror, along with its support for thuggish rule in the name of fighting al-Qaeda, helped radicalize the region.  (Remember, for instance, that while Washington was pouring billions of dollars into the American-equipped Egyptian Army and the American-trained Egyptian officer corps, Bush administration officials were delighted to enlist the Mubarak regime as War on Terror warriors, using Egypt’s jails as places to torture terror suspects rendered off any streets anywhere.)
In the process, by sweeping an area from North Africa to the Chinese border that it dubbed the Greater Middle East into that War on Terror, the Bush administration undoubtedly gave the region a new-found sense of unity, a feeling that the fate of its disparate parts was somehow bound together.
In addition, Bush’s top officials, fundamentalists all when it came to U.S. military might and delusional fantasists when it came to what that military could accomplish, had immense power at its command: the power to destroy.  They gave that power the snappy label “shock and awe,” and then used it to blow a hole in the heart of the Middle East by invading Iraq.  In the process, they put that land, already on the ropes, onto life support.
It’s never really come off.  In the wars, civil and guerrilla, set off by the American invasion and occupation, hundreds of thousands of Iraqis undoubtedly died and millions were sent into exile abroad or in their own land.  Today, Iraq remains a barely breathing carcass of a nation, unable to deliver something as simple as electricity to its restive people or pump enough oil to pay for the disaster.
At the same time, the Bush administration sat on its hands while Israel had its way, taking Palestinian lands via its settlement policies and blowing its own hole in southern Lebanon with American backing (and weaponry) in the summer of 2006, and a smaller hole of utter devastation through Gaza in 2009.  In other words, from Lebanon to Pakistan, the Greater Middle East was destabilized and radicalized.
The acts of Bush’s officials couldn’t have been rasher, or more destructive.  They managed, for instance, to turn Afghanistan into the globe’s foremost narco-state, even as they gave new life to the Taliban -- no small miracle for a movement that, in 2001, had lost any vestige of popularity.  Most crucial of all, they and the Obama adminsitration after them spread the war irrevocably to populous, nuclear-armed Pakistan.
To their mad plans and projects, you can trace, at least in part, the rise to power of Hezbollah in Lebanon and Hamas in Gaza (the only significant result of Bush’s “democracy agenda,” since Iraq’s elections arrived, despite Bush administration opposition, due to the prestige of Ayatollah Ali Sistani).  You can credit them with an Iran-allied Shiite government in Iraq and a resurgent Taliban in Afghanistan, as well as the growth of a version of the Taliban in the Pakistani tribal borderlands.  You can also credit them with the disorganization and impoverishment of the region.  In summary, when the Bush unilateralists took control of the car of state, they souped it up, armed it to the teeth, and sent it careening off to catastrophe.
How hollow the neocon quip of 2003 now rings: “Everyone wants to go to Baghdad.  Real men want to go to Tehran.”  But remember as well that, however much the Bush administration accomplished (in a manner of speaking), there was a wave of unilateralism, no less significant, that preceded it.
Our Financial Jihadis
Though we all know this first wave well, we don’t usually think of it as “unilateralist,” or in terms of the Middle East at all, or speak about it in the same breath with the Bush administration and its neocon supporters.  I’m talking about the globalists, sometimes called the neoliberals, who were let loose to do their damnedest in the good times of the post-Cold-War Clinton years.  They, too, were dreamy about organizing the planet and about another kind of American power that was never going to end: economic power.  (And, of course, they would be called back to power in Washington in the Obama years to run the U.S. economy into the ground yet again.)  They believed deeply that we were the economic superpower of the ages, and they were eager to create their own version of a Pax Americana.  Intent on homogenizing the world by bringing American economic power to bear on it, their version of shock-and-awe tactics involved calling in institutions like the International Monetary Fund to discipline developing countries into a profitable kind of poverty and misery.
In the end, as they gleefully sliced and diced subprime mortgages, they drove a different kind of hole through the world.  They were financial jihadis with their own style of shock-and-awe tactics and they, too, proved deeply destructive, even if in a different way.  The irony was that, in the economic meltdown of 2008, they finally took down the global economy they had helped “unify.”  And that occured just as the second wave of unilateralists were facing the endgame of their dreams of global domination.  In the process, for instance, Egypt, the most populous of Arab countries, was economically neoliberalized and -- except for a small elite who made out like the bandits they were -- impoverished.
Talk about “creative destruction”!  The two waves of American unilateralists nearly took down the planet.  They let loose demons of every sort, even as they ensured that the world’s first experience of a sole superpower would prove short indeed.  Heap onto the rubble they left behind the global disaster of rising prices for the basics -- food and fuel -- and you have a situation so combustible that no one should have been surprised when a Tunisian match lit it aflame.
That this moment began in the Greater Middle East should be no surprise either.  That it might not end there should not be ruled out.  This looks like, but may not be, an “Islamic” moment.  If the second wave of American unilateralists ensured that this would start as a Middle Eastern phenomenon, conditions for people's-power movements exist elsewhere as well.
The Gates of Hell
Nobody today remembers how, in September 2004, Amr Musa, the head of the Arab League, described the post-invasion Iraqi situation.  “The gates of hell,” he said, “are open in Iraq.”  This was not the sort of language we were used to hearing in the U.S., no matter what you felt about the war.  It read -- and probably still reads -- like an over-the-top metaphor, but it could as easily be taken as a realistic depiction of what happened not just in Iraq, but in the Greater Middle East and, to some extent, in the world.
Our unilateralists twice drove blithely through those gates, imagining that they were the gates to paradise.  The results are now clear for all to see.
And don't forget, the gates of hell remain open.  Keep your eyes on at least two places, starting with Saudi Arabia, about which practically no one is yet writing, though one of these days its situation could turn out to be shakier than now imagined.  Certainly, whoever controls the Saudi stock market thought so, because as the situation grew more tumultuous in Egypt, Saudi stocks took a nosedive.  With Saudi Arabia, you couldn’t get more basic when it comes to U.S. policy or the fate of the planet, given the amount of oil still under its desert sands.  And then don’t forget the potentially most frightening country of all, Pakistan, where the final gasp of America’s military unilateralists is still playing itself out as if on a reel of film that just won’t end.
Yes, the Obama administration may squeeze by in the region for a while.  Perhaps the Egyptian high command -- half of which seems to have been in Washington at the moment the you-know-what hit the fan in their own country -- will take over and perhaps they will suppress people power again for a period. Who knows?
One thing is clear inside the gates of hell: whatever wild flowers or weeds turn out to be capable of growing in the soil tilled so assiduously by the victors of 1991, Pax Americana proved to be a Pox Americana for the region and the world.
Tom Engelhardt, co-founder of the American Empire Project, runs the Nation Institute's TomDispatch.com.  His latest book is The American Way of War: How Bush’s Wars Became Obama’s (Haymarket Books). You can catch him discussing war American-style and that book in a Timothy MacBain TomCast video by clicking here.
[Note for TomDispatch Readers: Paul Woodward of the War in Context website has been offering remarkable ongoing coverage of the fast developing story in Egypt and the Middle East (including striking visuals and video clips).  Not surprisingly, the updates and analysis of Juan Cole at his Informed Comment blog has been invaluable, as has been the collecting of relevant reporting at Antiwar.com.  For three provocative pieces on the Obama administration and developing events, you might check out Jonathan Schell on the U.S. government versus people power, Gareth Porter on why the U.S. clings to an illusory quest for dominance in the Middle East, and Eric Margolis on America's crumbling Mideast Raj.]
Copyright 2011 Tom Engelhardt
http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175351/tomgram%3A_engelhardt%2C_goodbye_to_all_that/

Uri Rosenthal. Een Nederlandse Minister 28

Beste mensen,

De jaarlijkse Herzliya conference is gisteren weer van start gegaan, een belangrijke conferentie waar o.a. de strategic interests en bedreigingen van Israel besproken worden. Vorig jaar werd op deze bijeenkomst geconcludeerd dat na Iran de international solidarity movement bedreiging nummer 2 was van de staat Israel.

Zie link hieronder: Uri Rosenthal als spreker opgevoerd. Op dinsdag om 10.00 uur. Heeft hij daarom zijn reisschema aangepast?


Ayaan Hirshi Ali neemt ook deel trouwens.

The Zionist Regime 10


  • Published 07:31 07.02.11
  • Latest update 07:31 07.02.11

Jewish Voice for Peace chief threatened over pro-Palestinian campaign

Estee Chandler, who heads anti-Israel organization, found a poster of her picture, her workplace, other personal details and names of her relatives at her West coast home.

By Haaretz ServiceTags: Israel news US Jewish World Palestinians
The head of the pro-Palestinian organization Jewish Voice for Peace received a threatening poster at her Los Angeles area home this weekend for her involvement in the organization.
Estee Chandler, the organization leader on the West coast, said she found a poster on her front porch last week reading “WANTED for treason and incitement against Jews.”
Estee Chandler poster
Poster threatening head of Jewish voice for Peace Poster threatening Jewish Voice for Peace head Estee Chandler
Photo by: Courtesy of the Jewish Voice for Peace
According to Chandler, the poster displayed her picture, her workplace, other personal details and names of her relatives.
The poster charged her with using "her own presumed Jewishness as a weapon against the Jewish People and the Jewish State of Israel while conspiring with other well-known anti-Israel groups to assist in Israel's destruction and to otherwise engender hatred and incite further violence against the Jewish People and the Jewish State of Israel."
In a statement responding to the threat published on the organization's website, Chandler said  "I was forewarned about extremists when I first decided to start a Jewish Voice for Peace chapter here in my hometown of Los Angeles. I went into it with my eyes open. While I didn’t think anything would happen this soon, i cant say it wasn’t something I didn’t anticipate. Ultimately I think these people really are cowards, and not really to be feared."
"We are the silent majority of American Jews and its time for us to stop being silent. if we raise our voices a fraction of the level of these people- we will become the message, too many people who are with us are afraid. ultimately nonviolence is the only thing that has ever won out," she added.
In October last year, the Anti-Defamation League named the Jewish Voice for Peace — which champions the rights of Palestinians and is considered an anti-Israel organization by many Americans, especially after calling to boycott companies that profit from Israel's occupation of the West Bank and Gaza - among the top 10 anti-Israel groups in America.
The organization, however, maintains the stand that they are not fighting against Israel or challenging its right to exist, but rather questioning the Israeli government's policies and actions in the Palestinian territories.
The distributors of the threatening poster have yet to be found, according to the JVP.

Nazmiye Oral 13




Nazmiye Oral vermeldt in haar Volskkrant-column dat ze op televisie de beroemdste Arabische vrouw zag:


'de legendarische Nawal El Sadawi: arts, dissident, politiek activiste, feministe en sinds ’96 weer terug in haar land om het volk bij te staan. Ze was uitermate trots. Mensen als El Sadawi zijn er veel in Egypte.'


Ondanks het feit dat 'mensen als El Sadawi er veel [zijn] in Egypte' 


begint Oral haar opiniestuk met de bewering dat:


Meer dan tachtig procent van de Egyptenaren schijnt voor invoering van de sharia (islamitische wetgeving) te zijn. Al weet ik niet of die cijfers totaal betrouwbaar zijn, de vrees voor islamisering lijkt me niet ongegrond.
http://opinie.volkskrant.nl/artikel/show/id/7800/Gesluierde%20hersenen//



Hebben wij hier nu te maken met een nieuwe Hirshi Ali-geval of is Nazmiye Oral gewoon in de war geraakt dan wel over het paard getild misschien?  Kijk, of er zijn veel el Saadawi's die tegen de invoering van de sharia zijn of er zijn veel moslimfundamentalisten die voor de invoering van de sharia zijn. 


In de Volkskrant maakt het allemaal niet zoveel uit. Iedereen babbelt hier wat, werpt een balletje op, geeft een meninkje, roept eens wat. Elk betoogje in dit medialand  is dan ook volkomen consequentieloos. 

Nazmiye Oral 12

Het probleem van een klein land is dat het zoveel kleine mensen heeft en maar weinig grote. Vele opiniemakers hier babbelen maar wat raak over van alles en nog wat, vaak ongeinformeerd, vaak half geinformeerd. Feiten zijn in Nederland meningen geworden en meningen feiten, waardoor er nooit een rationele discussie kan ontstaan. Enfin, Nazmiye Oral schrijft in haar Volkskrant-column vandaag onder de treffende kop: 'Gesluierde hersenen':



Meer dan tachtig procent van de Egyptenaren schijnt voor invoering van de sharia (islamitische wetgeving) te zijn. Al weet ik niet of die cijfers totaal betrouwbaar zijn, de vrees voor islamisering lijkt me niet ongegrond.
http://opinie.volkskrant.nl/artikel/show/id/7800/Gesluierde%20hersenen//

Staat mevrouw Oral bekend als deskundige op het gebied van de Arabische wereld? Nee, over Turkije weet ze ongetwijfeld veel, maar dat is het dan wel. Zonder bronvermelding beweert ze nu dat

Meer dan tachtig procent van de Egyptenaren voor invoering van de sharia [schijnt] te zijn' met als gevolg dat 'de vrees voor islamisering niet ongegrond,' lijkt te zijn voor haar en, zo suggereert ze, voor ons allen in het christelijke Westen.

Waar we hier in feite mee te maken hebben is wartaal, propaganda, het kweken van angst om lezers te mobiliseren tegen het grote kwaad in de wereld dat sinds de val van de Sovjet Unie 'de islamisering' is, of kennelijk zou moeten zijn in de ogen van rechtse ideologen. Ik constateer dat de stelligheid van Oral's argumentatie niet gebaseerd is op feiten, maar op schijn. 'Meer dan tachtig procent schijnt,' en 'lijkt' etc. De opiniemaakster weet ondertussen niet of die cijfers 'totaal betrouwbaar zijn.' Kijk, Nazmiye Oral, de logica leert ons dat dit een onjuiste redenering is. Men kan als rationeel mens niet zonder enige bronvermelding het argument aanvoeren dat 'de vrees voor islamisering niet ongegrond [lijkt]' te zijn op grond van cijfers die niet bewezen, maar schijnen te zijn. Cijfers zijn feiten, en feiten schijnen niet, maar zijn onomstootbaar. Dat maakt ze nu juist feiten, nietwaar. 

Uw column bestaat uit zoveel onzekerheden en beweringen bij elkaar dat uw betoog onzinnig is. Of die cijfers kloppen en dan is 'de vrees' gegrond of die cijfers kloppen niet en is dus hetgeen u suggereert en beweert nonsens. Ook uw opmerking dat de cijfers niet 'totaal betrouwbaar' zouden kunnen zijn is absurd, want daarmee stelt u impliciet dat deze cijfers ook half 'betrouwbaar' kunnen zijn of eenkwart 'betrouwbaar' of zelfs onbetrouwbaar. Dat nu haalt de bodem onder uw argumentatie weg, aangezien cijfers voor een stellige bewering over 'gesluierde hersenen' simpelweg 'betrouwbaar' dienen te zijn. Als u twijfelt of die cijfers betrouwbaar zijn dan is uw verhaal niet meer dan wat geroddel in de marge. Hoe kan uw 'vrees voor islamisering' gegrond zijn of lijken als u niet weet of de cijfers kloppen? Ik vrees dat u lijdt aan de pathologie die u wilt beschrijven, namelijk aan 'gesluierde hersenen,' want over uw column hangt de ideologische sluier van bangmakerij. Meer daarover in een volgend stuk. Leest u eerst even dit als achtergrond informatie:


The Empire 753

Washington’s Secret History with the Muslim Brotherhood

Ian Johnson



Muslim Brotherhood senior leaders Essam el-Erian (center right) and Saad el-Katatni (center left) taking part in a protest in Cairo, January 30, 2011


As US-backed strongmen around North Africa and the Middle East are being toppled or shaken by popular protests, Washington is grappling with a crucial foreign-policy issue: how to deal with the powerful but opaque Muslim Brotherhood. In Egypt, the Brotherhood has taken an increasingly forceful part in the protests, issuing a statement Thursday calling for Mubarak’s immediate resignation. And though it is far from clear what role the Brotherhood would have should Mubarak step down, the Egyptian president has been claiming it will take over. In any case, the movement is likely to be a major player in any transitional government.
Journalists and pundits are already weighing in with advice on the strengths and dangers of this 83-year-old Islamist movement, whose various national branches are the most potent opposition force in virtually all of these countries. Some wonder how the Brotherhood will treat Israel, or if it really has renounced violence. Most—including the Obama administration —seem to think that it is a movement the West can do business with, even if the White House denies formal contacts.
If this discussion evokes a sense of déjà vu, this is because over the past sixty years we have had it many times before, with almost identical outcomes. Since the 1950s, the United States has secretly struck up alliances with the Brotherhood or its offshoots on issues as diverse as fighting communism and calming tensions among European Muslims. And if we look to history, we can see a familiar pattern: each time, US leaders have decided that the Brotherhood could be useful and tried to bend it to America’s goals, and each time, maybe not surprisingly, the only party that clearly has benefited has been the Brotherhood.
How can Americans be unaware of this history? Credit a mixture of wishful thinking and a national obsession with secrecy, which has shrouded the US government’s extensive dealings with the Brotherhood.
Consider President Eisenhower. In 1953, the year before the Brotherhood was outlawed by Nasser, a covert US propaganda program headed by the US Information Agency brought over three dozen Islamic scholars and civic leaders mostly from Muslim countries for what officially was an academic conference at Princeton University. The real reason behind the meeting was an effort to impress the visitors with America’s spiritual and moral strength, since it was thought that they could influence Muslims’ popular opinion better than their ossified rulers. The ultimate goal was to promote an anti-Communist agenda in these newly independent countries, many of which had Muslim majorities.
One of the leaders, according to Eisenhower’s appointment book, was “The Honorable Saeed Ramahdan, Delegate of the Muslim Brothers.”* The person in question (in more standard romanization, Said Ramadan), was the son-in-law of the Brotherhood’s founder and at the time widely described as the group’s “foreign minister.” (He was also the father of the controversial Swiss scholar of Islam, Tariq Ramadan.)
Eisenhower officials knew what they were doing. In the battle against communism, they figured that religion was a force that US could make use of—the Soviet Union was atheist, while the United States supported religious freedom. Central Intelligence Agency analyses of Said Ramadan were quite blunt, calling him a “Phalangist” and a “fascist interested in the grouping of individuals for power.” But the White House went ahead and invited him anyway.

President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the Oval Office with a group of Muslim delegates, 1953. Said Ramadan is second from the right.

By the end of the decade, the CIA was overtly backing Ramadan. While it’s too simple to call him a US agent, in the 1950s and 1960s the United States supported him as he took over a mosque in Munich, kicking out local Muslims to build what would become one of the Brotherhood’s most important centers—a refuge for the beleaguered group during its decades in the wilderness. In the end, the US didn’t reap much for its efforts, as Ramadan was more interested in spreading his Islamist agenda than fighting communism. In later years, he supported the Iranian revolution and likely aided the flight of a pro-Teheran activist who murdered one of the Shah’s diplomats in Washington.
Cooperation ebbed and flowed. During the Vietnam War, US attention was focused elsewhere but with the start of the Soviet war in Afghanistan, interest in cultivating Islamists picked up again. That period of backing the mujahedeen— some of whom morphed into al-Qaeda—is well-known, but Washington continued to flirt with Islamists, and especially the Brotherhood.
In the years after the September 11 attacks, the United States initially went after the Brotherhood, declaring many of its key members to be backers of terrorism. But by Bush’s second term, the US was losing two wars in the Muslim world and facing hostile Muslim minorities in Germany, France, and other European countries, where the Brotherhood had established an influential presence. The US quietly changed its position.
The Bush administration devised a strategy to establish close relations with Muslim groups in Europe that were ideologically close to the Brotherhood, figuring that it could be an interlocutor in dealing with more radical groups, such as the home-grown extremists in Paris, London and Hamburg. And, as in the 1950s, government officials wanted to project an image to the Muslim world that Washington was close to western-based Islamists. So starting in 2005, the State Department launched an effort to woo the Brotherhood. In 2006, for example, it organized a conference in Brussels between these European Muslim Brothers and American Muslims, such as the Islamic Society of North America, who are considered close to the Brotherhood. All of this was backed by CIA analyses, with one from 2006 saying the Brotherhood featured “impressive internal dynamism, organization, and media savvy.” Despite the concerns of western allies that supporting the Brotherhood in Europe was too risky, the CIA pushed for cooperation. As for the Obama administration, it carried over some of the people on the Bush team who had helped devise this strategy.
Why the enduring interest in the Brotherhood? Since its founding in 1928 by the Egyptian schoolteacher and imam Hassan al-Banna, the Brotherhood has managed to voice the aspirations of the Muslim world’s downtrodden and often confused middle class. It explained their backwardness in an interesting mixture of fundamentalism and fascism (or reactionary politics and xenophobia): today’s Muslims aren’t good enough Muslims and must return to the true spirit of the Koran. Foreigners, especially Jews, are part of a vast conspiracy to oppress Muslims. This message was—and still is—delivered through a modern, political party-like structure, that includes women’s groups, youth clubs, publications and electronic media, and, at times, paramilitary wings. It has also given birth to many of the more violent strains of radical Islamism, from Hamas to al-Qaeda, although many of such groups now find the Brotherhood too conventional. Little wonder that the Brotherhood, for all its troubling aspects, is interesting to western policy makers eager to gain influence in this strategic part of the world.
But the Brotherhood has been a tricky partner. In countries where it aspires to join the political mainstream, it renounces the use of violence locally. Hence the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt says it no longer seeks to overthrow the regime violently—although its members there think nothing of calling for Israel’s destruction. In Egypt, the Brotherhood also says it wants religious courts to enforce shariah, but at times has also said that secular courts could have final say. This isn’t to suggest that its moderation is just for show, but it’s fair to say that the Brotherhood has only partially embraced the values of democracy and pluralism.

Youssef Qaradawi

The group’s most powerful cleric, the Qatar-based Youssef Qaradawi, epitomizes this bifurcated worldview. He says women should be allowed to work and that in some countries, Muslims may hold mortgages (which are based on interest, a taboo for fundamentalists). But Qaradawi advocates the stoning of homosexuals and the murder of Israeli children—because they will grow up and could serve as soldiers.
Qaradawi is hardly an outlier. In past years, he has often been mentioned as a candidate to be the Egyptian branch’s top leader. He is very likely the most influential cleric in the Muslim world—on Friday, for example, thousands of Egyptian protesters in Tahrir Square listened to a broadcast of his sermon. He has also declared those demonstrators who have died defying the government to be martyrs.
That is an indication of the Brotherhood’s growing influence in the wave of protests around the region. In Egypt, the Brotherhood, after a slow start, has become a key player in the anti-government coalition; on Thursday, the new vice president, Omar Suleiman, invited the Brotherhood for talks. In Jordan, where the group is legal, King Abdullah met with the Brotherhood for the first time in a decade. And in Tunis, the Islamist opposition leader Rachid Ghanouchi, who has been a pillar of the Brotherhood’s European network, recently returned home from his London exile.
All of this points to the biggest difference between then and now. Half a century ago, the West chose to make use of the Brotherhood for short-term tactical gain, later backing many of the authoritarian governments that were also trying to wipe out the group. Now, with those governments tottering, the West has little choice; after decades of oppression, it is the Brotherhood, with its mixture of age-old fundamentalism and modern political methods, that is left standing.

* The appointment book and details of Ramadan’s visit are in the Eisenhower presidential archives in Abilene, Kansas. See my book A Mosque in Munich, pp. 116-119, for details of the visit. On the use of the Brotherhood post-9/11, see pp 222-228.
February 5, 2011 10:15 a.m.


http://www.nybooks.com/blogs/nyrblog/2011/feb/05/washingtons-secret-history-muslim-brotherhood/

http://stanvanhoucke.blogspot.com/2011/02/empire-753.html

zondag 6 februari 2011

Nazmiye Oral 11

Nazmiye Oral, 


Ik denk niet dat ik u tekort doe wanneer ik stel dat het centrale begrip in uw werk het verschijnsel integratie is. Integreren in de dominante cultuur, zijnde de westerse blanke mannelijke kapitalistische cultuur zoals die uiteindelijk door de VS in de twintigste eeuw haar definitieve vorm kreeg. De cultuur van het individualisme en de zelfverrijking ten koste van alles en iedereen. Daarin zullen de Turks Nederlandse jongeren moeten integreren, is uw mening, want pas dan kunnen ze hun eigen lot bepalen. Pas 'dan leef je... naar je eigen waarheid, en dat is wat telt.' Pas door het individualisme en door een breuk met de ouderlijke cultuur zullen ze 'in alle vrijheid' hun 'eigen pad bepalen.'


De vraag is nu of uw vooronderstelling juist is. Die vraag is belangrijk omdat zelfs de grondleggers van de Verenigde Staten hierover sterk van mening verschilden. Alexander Hamilton bijvoorbeeld die het laissez-faire economische model voorstelde dat in de VS domineert, stond in deze lijnrecht tegenover Thomas Jefferson die de handelselite verachtte en voor wie 'pursuit of happiness' belangrijker was dan 'pursuit of property'.  De opsteller van de Amerikaanse Onafhankelijkheids Verklaring waarschuwde zijn landgenoten voor het feit dat 



The mobs of great cities add just so much to the support of pure government as the sores do to the strength of the human body. It is the manners and spirit of a people which preserve a republic in vigour. A degeneracy in these is a canker which soon eats to the heart of its laws and constitution. 

De toekomst van het land zou volgens hem in handen van de gewone werkende burgers moeten liggen en niet in die van een parasitaire plutocratie. 'Certain the nation’s future lay not in the city but in the countryside Jefferson insisted the capital be moved out of New York to a rural settlement just across the Potomac from his native Virginia. It was the beginning of a fateful split in American life, one that would pit south against north, country against city, and lead ultimately to civil war,' zo luidt de gezaghebbende zienswijze.

‘He hated all things commercial,’ merkte de Amerikaanse auteur John Steele Gordon op over Jefferson, terwijl ‘Hamilton loved commerce, he understood money, banking and money and flow of power through the economy.’

En de Amerikaanse historica Carol Berkin wees erop dat:

Already this split between commercial, manufacturing society and an agrarian staple crop based society, between dynamic capital and capital that was invested in property and slaves and not so manipulative, these splits were already evolving, giving Hamilton’s programs for the new nation. 

Minder eufemistische gesteld: de strijd ging tussen een uitbuitende niets producerende handelselite en de producerende werkende massa. Over Hamilton zei Berkin terecht: 

He was no friend to real democracy. He was not at all interested in the masses of people having political voices, but I think he was very much interested in creating a dynamic society in which anyone of ability could rise. That is really American democracy in action

En hier zijn we nu precies bij het punt dat ik naar voren wil brengen. Mevrouw Oral, uw vooronderstellingen ten aanzien van het vrije Westen zijn te theoretisch. Ik betwijfel geenszins dat de Turkse cultuur als verstikkend kan worden ervaren, maar dat maakt de westerse cultuur geenszins minder verstikkend, of -- in uw woorden -- 'vrijer'. Vrijheid is een politiek begrip geworden. Onze vrijheid in het Westen bestaat uit de vuistregel: winner takes all, the best man wins, en 'best' in een kapitalistisch systeem betekent degene die het meest meedogenloos zijn/haar eigen belangen nastreeft  ten koste van alle anderen in een keiharde samenleving die van zichzelf vervreemd is geraakt. Het draait hier om het kapitalisme van de negentiende eeuwse robber barons, van laat twintigste eeuwse neoliberalen, van de I procent van de Amerikaanse bevolking die nu meer dan 40 procent van alle rijkdommen van het land bezit. Dit is onze democratie, de rest is propaganda. Wij leven in een 'democratie' die het vanzelfsprekend vindt dat onlangs Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff of the USA, onweersproken op televisie het volgende verklaarde naar aanleiding van de volksopstand in Egypte:


"One of my chief goals right now is to make sure we keep the lines of communication open -- I've talked to my counterpart a couple of times –- and also that we've got our military ready, should any kind of response or support be required," he said. "That isn't the case right now, but I'm very focused on that."
http://www.jcs.mil/newsarticle.aspx?ID=517


En niemand in het vrije pluriforme Westen die hiertegen publiekelijk van leer trok, want het wordt als normaal ervaren dat wij westerlingen bepalen of en wanneer er ergens een democratie mag ontstaan. Willen we dat niet dan kan het volk op zijn kop gaan staan, of beter nog, zal het volk zijn kop verliezen. Want the west is the best, zelfs u bent daarvan overtuigd. En alleen daarom stelt u voor dat Turks Nederlandse jongeren met hun familie breken om zo zonder afgeknipte 'vleugels' zich te kunnen conformeren aan een technologische cultuur waar niemand meer een greep op heeft. Zelfs niet eens het militair-industrieel complex dat de geschiedenis leek te dicteren. Intussen worden ook hier dissidente zienswijzen gemarginaliseerd, verzwegen. Hier bestaat censorship by omission. Ikzelf vind de foto hieronder een illustratie van het superieure Westen, maar een dergelijk beeld zal nooit de cover van het vrouwenblad Opzij halen, terwijl er toch een vrouw opstaat die onmiskenbaar de touwtjes in handen heeft. Het geeft een geheel nieuwe inhoud aan uw opmerking tegenover Opzij dat 'vrouwzijn leuk [is] omdat er mannen bestaan.'




Arab Regimes 134

To the Egyptian army

6 February 2011

Christopher King reminds the Egyptian army that the world is watching it, and asks: “Will you choose repression or freedom for your people?”

La vache qui rit – the laughing cow (البقرة الضاحكة) – has betrayed your people.
La vache qui rit - The laughing cow
Egyptians deride Mubarak as "La Vache Qui Rit" – after the French processed cheese that appeared in Egypt in the 1970s – because of his rural background and his bonhomie. For a time the image that dominated Mubarak jokes was that of an Egyptian archetype, the greedy and buffoonish peasant.
Was it so that La vache qui rit can grovel to America that Gamal Abdel Nasser threw the British out of your country?

You know that La vache chooses riches for himself and his friends but poverty for your people.

You know that La vache is America’s torturer.

You have heard the American president’s ambassador tell the world his message to La vache, that he should stay in power.

The world is watching the Egyptian army. Will you choose repression or freedom for your people? What did Colonel Nasser choose?

You know that the armies of Britain and the European Union are killing the people of Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan. They have lost their honour to America.

Soldiers know that honour is not a matter of money or strength of weapons. It is something from the heart.

Ask the Pashtun of Afghanistan what honour is.

Show the armies of Europe an example.  Show them what honour is.

The people of Europe need your example.
http://www.redress.cc/global/cking20110207

Arab Regimes 133



Egypt: the groupthink problem

7 February 2011
Lawrence Davidson argues that unless Egyptian ruler Hosni Mubarak and his deputy, Omar Suleiman, are made to bridge the gap between their parallel universe and the reality of life in Egypt, and draw the right conclusion and go, Egypt could embark on a ruinously dangerous path.

Through his stubbornness Hosni Mubarak has managed to transform himself from a 30-year "loyal ally" into an 82-year-old liability. Almost all dictators cling to power as long as they can. They get use to being the boss and it becomes a way of life for them. Mubarak is no different. But clearly the love of power is not all that is going on with him.

Disconnect

“... when Mubarak says he loves Egypt and will never run away from his country, he is talking about a place as distant from that of the ordinary citizen as the moon.”
Mubarak suffers from the same syndrome as did Louis XVI just prior to the French Revolution. Louis lived in the royal complex of Versailles. He rarely visited Paris, which was just 25 miles away, and knew almost nothing of the daily lives of his non-noble subjects. Like Louis, Hosni too lives in isolation from the people who go about their business beyond the walls of his presidential palace. Thus, when Mubarak says he loves Egypt and will never run away from his country, he is talking about a place as distant from that of the ordinary citizen as the moon.

A sure sign of this disconnect came with the 3 February report of an interview he gave to ABC’s Christiane Amanpour. According to the correspondent, Mubarak said he was "fed up with being president and would like to leave office now, but cannot, he says, for fear that the country would sink into chaos". This is surely a sign that the Egypt he knows is not the Egypt commonly recognized by his people or the rest of the world. From outside the presidential palace it is starkly clear that a sort of popular chaos is what already besets Egypt and the only way to calm it is for Mubarak to leave office and probably the country as well. The vast majority of Egyptians can see that this is so. President Obama can see this is so and has probably emphasized the fact to Mubarak. Even the king of Saudi Arabia can see what is happening and has offered Mubarak asylum in his country. So why can’t Hosni Mubarak see it?

Groupthink

Egptians stepping on Mubarak poster saying "Leave, you doer of injustice"Along with the isolation that rulers, and especially dictators, experience comes the phenomenon of "groupthink". In his bookVictims of Groupthink (Houghton Mifflin, 1972), Irving L. Janis shows how governing political elites create self-reinforcing decision-making circles. In other words, in the last 30 years Mubarak has surrounded himself with like-minded advisers and aides. These are people who have a vested interest in his regime. They constantly reinforce his worldview and second his decisions. There are no devil’s advocates here. Being a military dictator also probably drives the groupthink outlook. Generals give orders, they do not normally take them. And, all too often, it is the orders given that are meant to shape reality and not the other way around. It is assumed that whatever deviation there is between the two can be swept away by force.

Up till now this has been the Egyptian dictator’s expectation. His choice of vice-president, Omar Suleiman, is a product of Mubarak’s artificial groupthink world and no doubt selected to keep that world intact. Therefore, Suleiman’s initial impulse was to reflect his master’s preferences. Days and days of demonstrations by tens of thousands of Egyptians demanding Mubarak’s immediate departure were deemed impractical and disrespectful of a man who has so long "served his country". But Suleiman, until recently head of the regime’s intelligence services, now appears to have his doubts. Making reality match Mubarak’s fantasy will almost certainly require such force as to guarantee the radicalization of the protest movement.

Most of the conservative talking heads both in the US and in Israel fear the potential of an Iranian-style outcome for Egypt. That is why everyone from Glenn Beck to Binyamin Netanyahu have called on Mubarak to get tough lest we end up with ayatollahs on the Nile.
“...in the last 30 years Mubarak has surrounded himself with like-minded advisers and aides. These are people who have a vested interest in his regime. They constantly reinforce his worldview and second his decisions.”
But Egypt is not like Iran, neither the Iran of 1979 nor 2011. There is no rational reason to believe that the Muslim Brotherhood will suddenly turn into the Sunni version of a Republican Guard. However, if the Egyptian government does "get tough" and ends up applying force, there is yet another scenario that presents itself, and that is the recent history of Algeria.
Back in 1991-92 the Algerian military crushed the country’s Islamic political movement, the Islamic Salvation Front (FIS), just at the moment when it had won democratically-conducted national elections. A military dictatorship was established which proceeded to arrest or kill all the moderate FIS leaders (those who had "worked within the system"), thus opening up the movement to much more violent factions. Indeed, these factions were ready to be as violent as was the country’s military. The result was decades of vicious civil war.
One assumes that Omar Suleiman knows of the Algerian experience, and one assumes that someone from the State Department has filled in Barack Obama. Maybe they are both hoping that all the Egyptian protestors will just get tired and go home now that negotiations are said to be underway. This is unlikely to happen. With thousands of protestors still in the streets the opposition is most likely telling Suleiman that their reality is much more real than that of his dictator boss. If Suleiman is wise he will get the message and make it crystal clear to Mubarak that he has quite suddenly become a liability his nation can no longer afford. For unless Mubarak can shake off the groupthink, Egypt risks spelling liability, A l g e r i a. Now that will be chaos for you.

The Zionist Regime 9


http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-12377580

Ex-Israeli soldier admits leaking secret military files

Anat Kamm in Tel Aviv district court. 6 Feb 2011 During her military service, Anat Kamm worked as a clerk in the office of an army general
A former Israeli soldier has admitted leaking secret military information to a newspaper.
Anat Kamm pleaded guilty in return for the prosecution dropping more serious charges, which included spying and harming state security.
According to the charges, she passed more than 2,000 documents to the daily Haaretz newspaper.
Kamm, 24, will be sentenced at a later date and faces a maximum jail sentence of 15 years.
The Tel Aviv District Court heard that between 2005 and 2007 Kamm copied secret documents from army computers while working as a clerk in the office of a general.
After leaving the army and while working for an Israeli website, she gave the documents to a reporter from Haaretz.
Haaretz later published a report about a possibly-illegal Israeli operation to kill Palestinian militants in the West Bank.
Kamm was arrested in December 2009 although her detainment was only made public four months later. She has since been under house arrest.
Kamm's lawyer, Eitan Leman, said that the documents leaked to the Israeli journalist did not harm Israeli security.
Under the plea bargain, Kamm pleaded guilty to possessing and distributing secret information while the original charges that included harming state security were dropped.

More on This Story


“Never take the same road twice.” Ibn Battuta, 14th century Moroccan Berber traveler, philosopher, medic, theologian
“I want to pour water into hell and set paradise on fire, so that these two veils disappear and nobody shall any longer worship God out of fear of hell or hope of heaven, but solely for the sake of God's eternal beauty.” Rabi'ah Al-Adawiyya,  8th century woman saint from Basra, Iraq  
“The eternal mystery of the world is its comprehensibility.” “If I were not a physicist, I would probably be a musician.” Albert Einstein, 19th/20th century German physicist 
“He or she who says it cannot be achieved should not interrupt him or her achieving it.” Chinese Proverb



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