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Bu-lat-lat (boo-lat-lat) verb: to search, probe, investigate, inquire; to unearth facts Issue No. 36 October 21 - 27, 2001 Quezon City, Philippines |
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Promises, Promises BY
ROBERT FISK Back to Bulatlat.com Alternative Reader Index Tea
on the lawn. Perhaps only in the old British Empire do they make black tea and
milk in the same scalding pot, poured with lashings of sugar into fragile cups.
The bougainvillea blasted crimson and purple down the brick wall beside me while
big, aggressive black birds pursued each other over the cut grass of my tiny
Peshawar hotel. At the end of my little road lies the tiny British cemetery
wherein gravestones mark the assassination of the 19th century Raj's good men
from Surrey and Yorkshire, murdered by what were called ghazis, the Afghan
fundamentalists of their age who were often accompanied into battle and I
quote Captain Mannering of the Second Afghan war "by religious men
called talibs". In
those days, we made promises. We promised Afghan governments our support if they
kept out the Russians. We promised our Indian Empire wealth, communications and
education in return for its loyalty. Little has changed. Yesterday all day
long into the sweaty evening fighter-bombers pulsed through the yellow sky
above my little lawn, grey supersonic streaks that rose like hawks from
Peshawar's mighty runway and headed west towards the mountains of Afghanistan.
Their jet engines must have vibrated among the English bones in the cemetery at
the end of the road, as Hardy's Channel firing once disturbed Parson Thirdly's
last mortal remains. And, on the great black television in my bedroom, the
broken, veined screen proved that Imperial history does indeed repeat itself. General
Colin Powell stood on the right hand of General Pervez Musharraf after promising
a serious look at the problems of Kashmir and Pashtu representation in a future
Afghan government. The US Secretary of State and the general whom we must now
call the President of Pakistan spent much of their time chatting above the
overnight artillery bombardment by that other old Empire relic, the Indian army.
General Musharraf wanted a "short" campaign against Afghanistan,
General Powell a promise of continued Pakistani support in the US's "war
against terror". Musharraf wanted a solution to the problem of Kashmir.
Powell, promising that the United States was now a close friend of Pakistan,
headed off to India to oblige. Vain
promises have ever been a part of our conflict. In the 1914-18 war another
struggle against "evil", we should remember it was the British who
made the promises. To the Jews of the world, especially to Russian Jews, we
promised our support for a Jewish homeland in Palestine. To the Arabs, Lawrence
of Arabia promised independence. There's a wonderful moment in the film of the
same name when Peter O'Toole, clad in an Arab gown and looking not unlike Osama
bin Laden, asks General Allenby (Jack Hawkins) if he can promise Sherif Husseyn
independence in return for Arab support in destroying the Turkish army. For just
a brief, devastating moment, Hawkins hesitates; then his face becomes all
smiling benevolence: "Of course!" he says. Did I not see that very
same smile on Tony Blair's face as he clutched Arafat's hand in both of his
before leading him through the door of 10 Downing Street this week? In
the end, we imposed an Anglo-French military occupation on the Arabs who had
helped us and, three decades later gave the Jews only half of Palestine.
"Promises", as the Palestinian academic Walid Khalidi once pointed
out, "are meant to be kept." But not the kind you make in wartime. By
the Second World War, we were promising the Lebanese independence from the
French if they turned against their Vichy masters. Then the French broke their
promise and tried to stay on until driven out in ignominy in 1946. Two years
earlier, President Roosevelt anxious to secure Saudi oil rights from the
British as the war came to an end promised the Saudi monarchy that he would
not allow the Palestinians to be dispossessed. By
1990, after the invasion of Kuwait, we wanted the Arab and Muslim world on our
side against Iraq. President Bush Senior promised a "New World Order"
in which a nuclear-free indeed arms-free Middle East would live in an
oasis of peace. Once the Iraqis were driven out, however, we called a
short-lived "Middle-East" summit in Madrid and then sold more
missiles, tanks and jet fighters to the Arabs and Israelis than in the preceding
30 years. Israel's nuclear power was never mentioned. And
here we go again. Scarcely three days before Mr Powell acquired his sudden
interest in the problems of Kashmir, Yasser Arafat, the discredited old man of
Gaza "our bin Laden", as ex-General Ariel Sharon indecently called
him was invited to Downing Street where Tony Blair, hitherto a cautious
supporter of Palestinian independence, declared the need for a "viable
Palestinian state", including Jerusalem "viable" being a
gloss for a less chopped-up version of the Bantustan originally proposed for Mr
Arafat. Mr Blair, of course, had no need to fear American wrath since President
Bush Jnr had already discovered that even before 11 September or so he told
us he had a "vision" of a Palestinian state that accepted the
existence of Israel. Mr Arafat speaking English at length for the first time
in years instantly supported the air bombardment of Afghanistan. Poor old
Afghans. They were not on hand to remind the world that the same Mr Arafat had
once enthusiastically supported the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. Why
do we always play politics on the hoof, making quick-fix promises to vulnerable
allies of convenience after years of accepting, even creating, the injustices of
the Middle East and South-west Asia? How soon before we decide and not
before time to lift sanctions against Iraq, and allow tens of thousands of
Iraqi children to live instead of die? Or promise (in return for the overthrow
of Sadam) to withdraw our forces from the Arabian peninsula? After all say
this not too loudly if we promised and fulfilled all that, every one of
Osama bin Laden's demands will have been met. It's
intriguing to read the full text of what bin Laden demanded in his post-World
Trade Center attack video tape. He said in Arabic, in a section largely excised
in English translations, that "our [Muslim] nation has undergone more than
80 years of this humiliation..." and referred to "when the sword
reached America after 80 years". Bin Laden may be cruel, wicked, ruthless
or evil personified, but he is very intelligent. I think he was referring
specifically to the 1920 Treaty of Sθvres, written by the victorious allied
powers, which broke the Ottoman Empire and did away after 600 years of
sultanates and caliphates with the last dream of Arab unity. As the American
Professor James Robbins has shrewdly spotted, bin Laden's lieutenant, Ayman
Zawahri shouting into the video recorder from his Afghan cave 11 days ago
stated that the al-Quaida movement "will not tolerate a recurrence of
the Andalusia tragedy in Palestine". Andalusia? Yes, the debacle of
Andalusia marked the end of Muslim rule in Spain in 1492. We
may sprinkle quick-fix promises around. The people of the Middle East have
longer memories. Back in the mid-1990s, I used to visit the bookshops of
Algiers. Out in the triangle of death around Bentalha, hundreds of innocents
were having their throats slit by an Islamist group possibly also by
government forces many of whose members had fought in Afghanistan against
the Russians. In the shops I would look for books on Islam. Muslim culture,
Islamic history, Koranic thought. They were all there. And on the very next
shelves the same applied, I found, in Cairo bookshops would invariably
be textbooks on nuclear science, chemical engineering, aeronautics and
biological research. The
aeronautical texts have, of course, a fearful new resonance today. So have the
books on biological research. But the reason for their concurrence, I suspected,
lay in the history of Arab humiliation. The Arabs were among the first
scientists at the start of the second millennium, while the Crusaders
another of bin Laden's fixations were riding in technological ignorance into
the Muslim world. So while in the past few decades, our popular conception of
the Arabs vaguely embraced an oil-rich, venal and largely backward people,
awaiting our annual handouts and their virgins in heaven, many of them were
asking pertinent questions about their past and future, about religion and
science, about so I suspect how God and technology might be part of the
same universe. No
such long-term thought or historical questions for us. We just went on
supporting our Muslim dictators around the world especially in the Middle
East in return for their friendship and our vain promises to rectify
historical injustice. We
allowed our dictators to snuff out their socialist and communist parties; we
left their population little place to exercise their political opposition except
through religion. We went in for bestialization Messrs Khomeini, Abu Nidal,
Gaddafi, Arafat, Saddam and bin Laden rather than historical questioning.
And we made more promises. Presidents Carter and Reagan, I recall, made promises
to the Afghan mujahedin. Fight the Russians and we will help you. There would
then be assistance in Afghanistan's economic recovery. A re-building of the
country, even (this from the innocent Mr Carter) "democracy" not a
concept to be sure that we would now be promising to the Pakistanis,
Palestinians, Uzbeks or Saudis. Of course, once the Russians were gone in 1989,
there was no economic assistance. But last year, there was President Clinton,
loud once more in America's promises of economic help for Pakistan, asking for a
rejection of bin Laden; yet his only sense of perspective was to tell the
Pakistani people that their history was wait for it "as long as the
river Indus". The
problem, I fear, is that without any sense of history, we do not understand
injustice. We only compound that injustice, after years of indolence, when we
want to bribe our would-be allies with promises of immense historical importance
a resolution to Palestine, Kashmir, an arms-free Middle East, Arab
independence, an economic Nirvana because we are at war tell them what
they want to hear, promise them what they want anything, so long as we can
get our armadas into the air in our latest "war against evil". So there was General Powell yesterday promising to deal with Kashmir while General Musharraf pleaded for a short war and while the jets went sweeping off towards Afghanistan from the Peshawar airbase. Back to Bulatlat.com Alternative Reader Index We want to know what you think of this article.
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