zaterdag 26 februari 2011

Arab Regimes 176


Weekend Edition
February 25 - 26, 2011

CounterPunch Diary

It Sure Looks Like Osama bin Laden is Winning the Great War on Terror

By ALEXANDER COCKBURN
From Washington DC we hear brave talk about Uncle Sam leading the charge for democracy across the Arab world, and thus restoring himself to high esteem in Arab eyes as something other than the sponsor of tyranny and torture by neoliberalism, the electrode and the waterboard.
The only people fooled by this kind of talk are themselves. Barack Obama may have zig-zagged his way towards some tougher talk to tyrants, but there was no shilly-shallying about  the lonely US Feb. 18 veto in the UN Security Council of resolutions condemning Israeli settlements. You think al-Jazeera did not broadcast that across the world?
(Washington invokes Twitter and Facebook, made-in-America tools in the struggle for democracy in the Middle East. Compared in significance to al-Jazeera they are like a couple of ticks on the rump of a water buffalo.)
Back in the fall of 2001, Osama bin Laden habitually cited among al Qaeda’s motives for the September 11 attacks the following:  America’s oppression of the Muslim world, most specifically at that time of Iraq with sanctions (Albright’s “we think the price is worth it” was the single greatest recruiting line in the history of Terror)  and bombing;  the condition of Saudi Arabia as a satrapy of the American empire; and Israel’s oppression of the Palestinians.
Unroll the map of the Middle East and North Africa ten years later. As Vijay Prashad puts it in our new newsletter:
“The U. S. war in Iraq handed the country over to a pro-Iranian regime. In late January, the Hezbollah-backed candidate (Najib Mikati) became Prime Minister of Lebanon, and Hamas’ hands were strengthened as the Palestine Authority’s remaining legitimacy came crashing down when al-Jazeera published the Palestine Papers. Ben Ali and Mubarak’s exile threw Tunisia and Egypt out of the column of the status quo states – [ie satrapies of Empire]. Libya’s Qaddafi and Yemen’s Saleh have been loyal allies in the War on Terror.”
And here’s the Saudi King, watching al-Jazeera and looking out at the encirclement: Iraq, Syria, Lebanon. Yemen unstable, Bahrein very dodgy, with all those Shia the other side of the causeway.
But are the Arab masses rallying towards a new Caliphate, as tremulously advertised by Glen Beck? Of course not. As Prashad writes:
“As the status quo withered, its loyal dogs tried out the old chant about the threat of Islamic Fundamentalism. Mubarak’s chorus about the Muslim Brotherhood was off key. When Sheikh Yusuf al Qaradawi returned from his exile in Qatar, he did not play the part of Khomeini. The Sheikh opened his sermon in Tahrir Square with a welcome to both Muslims and Christians. Qaddafi’s shrieks about a potential al-Qaeda in the Maghreb being formed in the eastern part of Libya repeated the paranoid delusions of the AFRICOM planners.”
I imagine Osama is happy enough at the present turmoil, and we can add to Prashad’s list the growing US desire to cobble together some kind of excuse to get out of Afghanistan, with plans dissected by our dashing and very well informed former brigadier, Shaukat Qadir, also in our current newsletter. Petraeus is a fading force. Want to see a general with more brains and less gold braid and medals?
petraeus
eisenhower

Those signs of solidarity and mutual support in Tahrir Square and around the Capitol building in Madison, Wisconsin  have a solid economic underpinning.  The boost in confidence, respect  and self-esteem  the Empire of Capital  got from the Soviet Union’s collapse in 1991 is relentlessly deflating as neoliberalism creates its hundreds of billionaires and  its billions of paupers across the world.
As Andrew Levine write in our new newsletter, apropos the importance of Madison:
“What is at stake is the endgame of the so-called Reagan Revolution. A victorious assault on organized labor would settle the matter once and for all. Scott Walker and his ilk know what the stakes are.  Thanks to his predations, workers and their allies now know too. …the financialization of contemporary capitalism, the globalization of manufacturing and trade, and, more generally, the world-wide assault on social and economic advances gained at great cost over the past century and a half.  The problem, in short, is that to survive, capitalism must expand – and, with so few areas left for expansion, the public sphere has become a target too tempting to resist.  What is under attack is the public sphere itself.  Public unions are its first (and last?) line of defense.”
What would have been good to see around the Capitol building in Madison would be signs – maybe I missed them – of support for the students of the University of Puerto Rico who have endured military occupation, imprisonment and beatings for their strikes against higher fees and increasing privatization. Amid the upsurge in Egypt students and faculty went on strike for the second time in a year and forced the governor, attending the Republican CPAC conference in Washington to return and pull the military off the campus.
I always thought the Piven-Cloward 60s recipe for bankrupting capitalism by everyone going on welfare was reformist battiness. Capital could figure out that one. End welfare! Put in Bill Clinton to wipe out AFDC and then have that nice black man Obama to square up to Medicare and maybe Social Security. Osama had a better idea. Let war bleed the Empire dry. Think of that confetti on Petraeus’s left breast as the growth of the military budget since Eisenhower’s modest decorations.
The next Petraeus churned up the ladder of promotion will have to have an aide haul a tailor’s dummy behind him to accommodate all the medals symbolizing the US military budget as it will look a decade or so down the road.
Yes, Our Latest Newsletter is a Must!
I trust you’re getting the correct idea from the foregoing --  that our new newsletter is a must read, with Esam al-Amin and Vijay Prashad rounding off their fantastic reports on this website with newsletter special reviews of what’s happened and what is to come, plus Shaukat Qadir and Andrew Levine, cited above.
Subscribe now! And have this newsletter in your inbox, swiftly deliveredas a pdf, or – at whatever speed the US Postal Service first-class delivery system may muster – in your mailbox.
And once you have discharged this enjoyable mandate I also urge you strongly to click over to our Books page, most particularly for our latest release, Jason Hribal’s truly extraordinary Fear of the Animal Planet – introduced by Jeffrey St Clair and already hailed by Peter Linebaugh, Ingrid Newkirk (president and co-founder of PETA) and Susan Davis, the historian of Sea World,  who writes that “Jason Hribal stacks up the evidence, and the conclusions are inescapable. Zoos, circuses and theme parks are the strategic hamlets of Americans’ long war against nature itself.”
Alexander Cockburn can be reached at alexandercockburn@asis.com.

Exclusively in the New Print Issue of CounterPunch
The Great Upsurge
Esam al-Amin and Vijay Prashad on the rebellions that have already changed the world. PLUS Shaukat Qadir on how the US hopes to quit Afghanistan. PLUS Andrew Levine on labor’s stand in Madison Wisconsin. Subscribe now! If you find our site useful please: Click here to make a donation. CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents. Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year!

Recent Print Issues, Still Available for Purchase

The Empire Trips Up
How “putting Israel first” led US into blindness about Egypt. Kathy Christison reviews Wiki-cables exclusive to CounterPunch PLUS Stan Cox on mass death on the high seas as shipping owners send seamen to their deaths in floating coffins PLUS Larry Portis on sociocide – a better term than genocide. Subscribe now! If you find our site useful please: Click here to make a donation. CounterPunch books and t-shirtsmake great presents. Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year!

Wikileaks on Gaza
Read US State Department cables from the Wikileak trove, previously unpublished anywhere! They concern Israel’s onslaught on Gaza a year ago and the advice the US was giving Israelis on how to justify their war crimes. Kathy Christison guides us through these nauseating secret dispatches. Tunisia …Egypt … Alexander Cockburn on Tremors in the Empire; Carl Ginsburg on record U.S. corporate profits; Larry Portis on how a 93-year old Frenchman is rekindling the spirit of ’68. Subscribe now! If you find our site useful please: Click here to make a donation. CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents. Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year!

"Ending US-Sponsored Torture Forever"
Joann Wypijewski reports on the growth of the U.S. torture archipelago and on the church-led campaign led by the National Religious Campaign Against Torture (NRCAT) which is striking a spark amid the darkness. Also in this latest newsletter, Diana Johnstone explores the one of the sinister monuments of the Clinton years: Kosovo, whose gangster premier runs a criminal  enterprise which has murdered Serbian prisoners in order to sell their vital organs on the world market.Subscribe now! If you find our site useful please: Click here to make a donation. CounterPunch books and t-shirts make great presents. Order CounterPunch By Email For Only $35 a Year!


Recent Print Issues, Still Available for Purchase

Is the Next Great Awakening at Hand?
The First Great Awakening led after many years to the American and Jeffersonian Revolutions. 
The Second Great Awakening led, after many years, to the Civil War and Abolition. 
The Third Great Awakening led, after setbacks, to the Populist and then Progressive Movements. 
The Fourth Great Awakening led to the New Deal 
The Fifth Great Awakening led to the second Reconstruction, the Great Society, Feminism, and social upheavals.  
Is The Sixth Great Awakening now due? What quarter will it come from? Read Mason Gaffney’s extraordinary history and predictions.

The Hidden History of Animal Resistance
Don’t miss Jeffrey St Clair’s riveting account of how animals fight back against cruelty and exploitation. This is history written from the end of the bear’s chain, from inside the tiger’s cage, from the depths of the orca tank. Read too the forgotten sagas of medieval animal trials, where non-human species were given rights, their consciousness acknowledged. Also in this exciting new newsletter, Larry Portis on why Sarkozy is getting away with it.




    

   

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