10 Things to Know about U.S.
Policy in the Middle East
Stephen Zunes, AlterNet
September 26, 2001
http://www.alternet.org/story.html?StoryID=11592
1. The United States has played a major
role in the militarization of the region.
The Middle East is the destination of the
majority of American arms exports, creating enormous profits for weapons
manufacturers and contributing greatly to the militarization of this
already overly-militarized region. Despite promises of restraint, U.S.
arms transfers to the region have topped $60 billion since the Gulf War.
Arms sales are an important component of building political alliances
between the U.S. and Middle Eastern countries, particularly with the
military leadership of recipient countries. There is a strategic benefit
for the U.S. in having U.S.-manufactured systems on the ground in the
event of a direct U.S. military intervention. Arms sales are also a means
of supporting military industries faced with declining demand in Western
countries.
To link arms transfers with a given
country's human rights record would lead to the probable loss of tens of
billions of dollars in annual sales for American weapons manufacturers,
which are among the most powerful special interest groups in Washington.
This may help explain why the United States has ignored the fact that UN
Security Council resolution 687, which the U.S. has cited as justification
for its military responses to Iraq’s possible rearmament, also calls for
region-wide disarmament efforts, something the United States has rejected.
The U.S. justifies the nearly $3 billion in
annual military aid to Israel on the grounds of protecting that country
from its Arab neighbors, even though the United States supplies 80 percent
of the arms to these Arab states. The 1978 Camp David Accord between
Israel and Egypt was in many ways more like a tripartite military pact
than a peace agreement in that it has resulted in more than $5 billion is
annual U.S. arms transfers to those two countries. U.S. weapons have been
used repeatedly in attacks against civilians by Israel, Turkey and other
countries. It is not surprising that terrorist movements have arisen in a
region where so many states maintain their power influence through force
of arms.
2. The U.S. maintains an ongoing military
presence in the Middle East.
The United States maintains an ongoing
military presence in the Middle East, including longstanding military
bases in Turkey, a strong naval presence in the eastern Mediterranean and
Arabian Sea, as well as large numbers of troops on the Arabian Peninsula
since the Gulf War. Most Persian Gulf Arabs and their leaders felt
threatened after Iraq’s seizure of Kuwait and were grateful for the
strong U.S. leadership in the 1991 war against Saddam Hussein's regime and
for UN resolutions designed to curb Iraq's capability to produce weapons
of mass destruction. At the same time, there is an enormous amount of
cynicism regarding U.S. motives in waging that war. Gulf Arabs, and even
some of their rulers, cannot shake the sense that the war was not fought
for international law, self-determination and human rights, as the senior
Bush administration claimed, but rather to protect U.S. access to oil and
to enable the U.S. to gain a strategic toehold in the region.
The ongoing U.S. air strikes against Iraq
have not garnered much support from the international community, including
Iraq's neighbors, who would presumably be most threatened by an Iraqi
capability of producing weapons of mass destruction. In light of
Washington’s tolerance -- and even quiet support -- of Iraq’s powerful
military machine in the 1980s, the United States' exaggerated claims of an
imminent Iraqi military threat in 1998, after Iraq’s military
infrastructure was largely destroyed in the Gulf War, simply lack
credibility. Nor have such recent air strikes eliminated or reduced the
country’s capability to produce weapons of mass destruction,
particularly the most plausible threat of biological weapons.
Furthermore, only the United Nations
Security Council has the prerogative to authorize military responses to
violations of its resolutions; no single member state can do so
unilaterally without explicit permission. Many Arabs object to the U.S.
policy of opposing efforts by Arabs states to produce weapons of mass
destruction, while tolerating Israel’s sizable nuclear arsenal and
bringing U.S. nuclear weapons into Middle Eastern waters as well as
rejecting calls for the creation of a nuclear-free zone in the region.
In a part of the world which has been
repeatedly conquered by outside powers of the centuries, this ongoing U.S.
military presence has created an increasing amount of resentment. Indeed,
the stronger the U.S. military role has become in the region in recent
decades, the less safe U.S. interests have become.
3. There has been an enormous humanitarian
toll resulting from U.S. policy toward Iraq.
Iraq still has not recovered from the 1991
war, during which it was on the receiving end of the heaviest bombing in
world history, destroying much of the country’s civilian infrastructure.
The U.S. has insisted on maintaining strict sanctions against Iraq to
force compliance with international demands to dismantle any capability of
producing weapons of mass destruction. In addition, the U.S. hopes that
such sanctions will lead to the downfall of Saddam Hussein's regime.
However, Washington’s policy of enforcing strict sanctions against Iraq
appears to have had the ironic effect of strengthening Saddam’s regime.
With as many as 5,000 people, mostly children, dying from malnutrition and
preventable diseases every month as a result of the sanctions, the
humanitarian crisis has led to worldwide demands -- even from some of
Iraq’s historic enemies -- to relax the sanctions. Furthermore, as they
are now more dependent than ever on the government for their survival, the
Iraqi people are even less likely to risk open defiance.
Unlike the reaction to sanctions imposed
prior to the war, Iraqi popular resentment over their suffering lays the
blame squarely on the United States, not the totalitarian regime, whose
ill-fated conquest of Kuwait led to the economic collapse of this
once-prosperous country. In addition, Iraq's middle class, which would
most likely have formed the political force capable of overthrowing
Saddam’s regime, has been reduced to penury. It is not surprising that
most of Iraq’s opposition movements oppose the U.S. policy of ongoing
punitive sanctions and air strikes.
In addition, U.S. officials have stated
that sanctions would remain even if Iraq complied with United Nations
inspectors, giving the Iraqi regime virtually no incentive to comply. For
sanctions to work, there needs to be a promise of relief to counterbalance
the suffering; that is, a carrot as well as a stick. Indeed, it was the
failure of both the United States and the United Nations to explicitly
spell out what was needed in order for sanctions to be lifted that led to
Iraq suspending its cooperation with UN weapons inspectors in December
1998.
4. The United States has not been a fair
mediator in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
For over two decades, the international
consensus for peace in the Middle East has involved the withdrawal of
Israeli forces to within internationally recognized boundaries in return
for security guarantees from Israel's neighbors, the establishment of a
Palestinian state in the West Bank and Gaza and some special status for a
shared Jerusalem. Over the past 30 years, the Palestine Liberation
Organization, under the leadership of Yasir Arafat, has evolved from
frequent acts of terrorism and the open call for Israel's destruction to
supporting the international consensus for a two-state solution. Most Arab
states have made a similar evolution toward favoring just such a peace
settlement.
However, the U.S. has traditionally
rejected the international consensus and currently takes a position more
closely resembling that of Israel's right-wing government: supporting a
Jerusalem under largely Israeli sovereignty, encouraging only partial
withdrawal from the occupied territories, allowing for the confiscation of
Palestinian land and the construction of Jewish-only settlements and
rejecting an independent state Palestine outside of Israeli strictures.
The interpretation of autonomy by Israel
and the United States has thus far led to only limited Palestinian control
of a bare one-fourth of the West Bank in a patchwork arrangement that more
resembles American Indian reservations or the infamous Bantustans of
apartheid-era South Africa than anything like statehood. The U.S. has
repeatedly blamed the Palestinians for the violence of the past year, even
though Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other reputable human
rights group have noted that the bulk of the violence has come from
Israeli occupation forces and settlers.
Throughout the Israeli-Palestinian peace
process, the U.S. has insisted on the two parties working out a peace
agreement among themselves, even though there has always been a gross
asymmetry in power between the Palestinians and their Israeli occupiers.
The U.S. has blamed the Palestinians for not compromising further, even
though they already ceded 78 percent of historic Palestine to the Israelis
in the Oslo Accords; the Palestinians now simply demand that the Israelis
withdraw their troops and colonists only from lands seized in the 1967,
which Israel is required to do under international law.
The U.S.-backed peace proposal by former
Israeli prime minister Ehud Barak at the 2000 talks at Camp David would
have allowed Israel to annex large swaths of land in the West Bank,
control of most of Arab East Jerusalem and its environs, maintain most of
the illegal settlements in a pattern that would have divided the West Bank
into non-contiguous cantons, and deny Palestinian refugees the right of
return. With the U.S. playing the dual role of the chief mediator of the
conflict as well as the chief diplomatic, financial and military backer of
Israeli occupation forces, the U.S. goal seems to be more that of Pax
Americana than that of a true peace.
5. U.S. support for Israel occupation
forces has created enormous resentment throughout the Middle East.
The vast majority of Middle Eastern states
and their people have belatedly acknowledged that Israel will continue to
exist as part of the region as an independent Jewish state. However, there
is enormous resentment at ongoing U.S. diplomatic, financial and military
support for Israeli occupation forces and their policies.
The U.S. relationship with Israel is
singular. Israel represents only one one-thousandth of the world’s
population and has the 16th highest per capita income in the world, yet it
receives nearly 40 percent of all U.S. foreign aid. Direct aid to Israel
in recent years has exceeded $3.5 billion annually, with an additional $1
billion through other sources, and has been supported almost unanimously
in Congress, even by liberal Democrats who normally insist on linking aid
to human rights and international law. Although the American public
appears to strongly support Israel’s right to exist and wants the U.S.
to be a guarantor of that right, there is growing skepticism regarding the
excessive level and unconditional nature of U.S. aid to Israel. Among
elected officials, however, there are virtually no calls for a reduction
of current aid levels in the foreseeable future, particularly as nearly
all U.S. aid to Israel returns to the United States either via purchases
of American armaments or as interest payments to U.S. banks for previous
loans.
Despite closer American strategic
cooperation with the Persian Gulf monarchies since the Gulf War, these
governments clearly lack Israel's advantages in terms of political
stability, a well-trained military, technological sophistication and the
ability to quickly mobilize human and material resources.
Despite serious reservations about
Israel’s treatment of the Palestinians, most individual Americans have a
longstanding moral commitment to Israel's survival. Official U.S.
government policy supporting successive Israeli governments in recent
years, however, appears to be crafted more from a recognition of how
Israel supports American strategic interests in the Middle East and
beyond. Indeed, 99 percent of all U.S. aid to Israel has been granted
since the 1967 war, when Israel proved itself more powerful than any
combination of its neighbors and occupied the territories of hundreds of
thousands of Palestinians and other Arabs. Many Israelis supportive of
that country's peace movement believe the United States has repeatedly
undermined their efforts to moderate their government's policies, arguing
that Israeli security and Palestinian rights are not mutually-exclusive,
as the U.S. seems to believe, but mutually dependent on the other.
As long as U.S. military, diplomatic and
economic support of the Israeli government remains unconditional despite
Israel's ongoing violation of human rights, international law and previous
agreements with the Palestinians, there is no incentive for the Israeli
government to change its policies. The growing Arab resentment that
results can only threaten the long-term security interests of both Israel
and the United States.
6. The United States has been inconsistent
in its enforcement of international law and UN Security Council
resolutions.
The U.S. has justified its strict sanctions
and ongoing air strikes against Iraq on the grounds of enforcing United
Nations Security Council resolutions. In addition, in recent years the
United States has successfully pushed the UN Security Council to impose
economic sanctions against Libya, Afghanistan and Sudan over extradition
disputes, an unprecedented use of the UN’s authority. However, the U.S.
has blocked sanctions against such Middle East allies as Turkey, Israel
and Morocco for their ongoing occupation of neighboring countries, far
more egregious violations of international law that directly counter the
UN Charter. In recent years, for example, the U.S. has helped block the
Security Council from moving forward with a UN-sponsored resolution on the
fate of the Moroccan-occupied country of Western Sahara because of the
likelihood that the people would vote for independence from Morocco, which
invaded the former Spanish colony with U.S. backing in 1975.
Over the past 30 years, the U.S. has used
its veto power to protect its ally Israel from censure more than all other
members of the Security Council have used their veto power on all other
issues combined. This past spring, for example, the U.S. vetoed an
otherwise-unanimous resolution which would have dispatched unarmed human
rights monitors to the Israeli-occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip. In
addition, the U.S. has launched a vigorous campaign to rescind all
previous UN resolutions critical of Israel. Washington has labeled them
"anachronistic," even though many of the issues addressed in
these resolutions -- human rights violations, illegal settlements,
expulsion of dissidents, development of nuclear weapons, the status of
Jerusalem, and ongoing military occupation -- are still germane. The White
House contends that the 1993 Oslo Accords render these earlier UN
resolutions obsolete. However, such resolutions cannot be reversed without
the approval of the UN body in question; the U.S. cannot unilaterally
discount their relevance. Furthermore, no bilateral agreement (like Oslo)
can supersede the authority of the UN Security Council, particularly if
one of the two parties (the Palestinians) believe that these resolutions
are still binding.
Most observers recognize that one of the
major obstacles to Israeli-Palestinian peace is the expansion of Israeli
settlements in the occupied territories. However, the U.S. has blocked
enforcement of UN Security Council resolutions calling for Israel to
withdraw its settlements from Palestinian land. These settlements were
established in violation of international law, which forbids the
colonization of territories seized by military force. In addition, the
U.S. has not opposed the expansion of existing settlements and has shown
ambivalence regarding the large-scale construction of exclusively Jewish
housing developments in Israeli-occupied East Jerusalem. Furthermore, the
U.S. has secured additional aid for Israel to construct highways
connecting these settlements and to provide additional security, thereby
reinforcing their permanence. This places the United States in direct
violation of UN Security Council resolution 465, which "calls upon
all states not to provide Israel with any assistance to be used
specifically in connection with settlements in the occupied
territories."
7. The United States has supported
autocratic regimes in the Middle East.
The growing movement favoring democracy and
human rights in the Middle East has not shared the remarkable successes of
its counterparts in Eastern Europe, Latin America, Africa and parts of
Asia. Most Middle Eastern governments remain autocratic. Despite
occasional rhetorical support for greater individual freedoms, the United
States has generally not supported tentative Middle Eastern steps toward
democratization. Indeed, the United States has reduced -- or maintained at
low levels -- its economic, military and diplomatic support to Arab
countries that have experienced substantial political liberalization in
recent years while increasing support for autocratic regimes such as Saudi
Arabia, Kuwait, Egypt and Morocco. Jordan, for example, received
large-scale U.S. support in the 1970s and 1980s despite widespread
repression and authoritarian rule; when it opened up its political system
in the early 1990s, the U.S. substantially reduced -- and, for a time,
suspended -- foreign aid. Aid to Yemen was cut off within months of the
newly unified country’s first democratic election in 1990.
Despite its laudable rhetoric, Washington's
real policy regarding human rights in the Middle East is not difficult to
infer. It is undeniable that democracy and universally recognized human
rights have never been common in the Arab-Islamic world. Yet the tendency
in the U.S. to emphasize cultural or religious explanations for this fact
serves to minimize other factors that are arguably more salient --
including the legacy of colonialism, high levels of militarization and
uneven economic development -- most of which can be linked in part to the
policies of Western governments, including the United States. There is a
circuitous irony in a U.S. policy that sells arms, and often sends direct
military aid, to repressive Middle Eastern regimes that suppress their own
people and crush incipient human rights movements, only to then claim that
the resulting lack of democracy and human rights is evidence that the
people do not want such rights. In reality, these arms transfers and
diplomatic and economic support systems play an important role in keeping
autocratic Arab regimes in power by strengthening the hand of the state
and supporting internal repression. The U.S. then justifies its
large-scale military aid to Israel on the grounds that it is "the
sole democracy in the Middle East," even though these weapons are
used less to defend Israeli democracy than to suppress the Palestinians’
struggle for self-determination.
8. U.S. policy has contributed to the rise
of radical Islamic governments and movements.
The United States has been greatly
concerned in recent years over the rise of radical Islamic movements in
the Middle East. Islam, like other religions, can be quite diverse
regarding its interpretation of the faith's teachings as they apply to
contemporary political issues. There are a number of Islamic-identified
parties and movements that seek peaceful coexistence and cooperation with
the West and are moderate on economic and social policy. Many Islamist
movements and parties have come to represent mainstream pro-democracy and
pro-economic justice currents, replacing the discredited Arab socialism
and Arab nationalist movements.
There are also some Islamic movements in
the Middle East today that are indeed reactionary, violent, misogynist and
include a virulently anti-American perspective that is antithetical to
perceived American interests. Still others may be more amenable to
traditional U.S. interests but reactionary in their approach to social and
economic policies, or vice versa.
Such movements have risen to the forefront
primarily in countries where there has been a dramatic physical
dislocation of the population as a result of war or uneven economic
development. Ironically, the United States has often supported policies
that have helped spawn such movements, including giving military,
diplomatic and economic aid to augment decades of Israeli attacks and
occupation policies, which have torn apart Palestinian and Lebanese
society, and provoked extremist movements that were unheard of as recently
as 20 years ago. The U.S.-led overthrow of the constitutional government
in Iran in 1953 and subsequent support for the Shah's brutal dictatorship
succeeded in crushing that country’s democratic opposition, resulting in
a 1979 revolution led by hard-line Islamic clerics. The United States
actually backed extremist Islamic groups in Afghanistan when they were
challenging the Soviet Union in the 1980s, including Osama bin Laden and
many of his followers. To this day, the United States maintains very close
ties with Saudi Arabia, which – despite being labeled a
"moderate" Arab regime -- adheres to an extremely rigid
interpretation of Islam and is among the most repressive regimes in the
world.
9. The U.S. promotion of a neo-liberal
economic model in the Middle East has not benefitted most people of the
region.
Like much of the Third World, the United
States has been pushing a neo-liberal economic model of development in the
Middle East through such international financial institutions as the
International Monetary Fund, the World Bank and the World Trade
Organization. These have included cutbacks in social services,
encouragement of foreign investment, lower tariffs, reduced taxes, the
elimination of subsidies for farmers and basic foodstuffs as well as
ending protection for domestic industry.
While in many cases, this has led to an
increase in the overall Gross National Product, it has dramatically
increased inequality, with only a minority of the population benefitting.
Given the strong social justice ethic in Islam, this growing disparity
between the rich and the poor has been particularly offensive to Muslims,
whose exposure to Western economic influence has been primarily through
witnessing some of the crassest materialism and consumerism from U.S.
imports enjoyed by the local elites.
The failure of state-centric socialist
experiments in the Arab world have left an ideological vacuum among the
poor seeking economic justice which has been filled by certain radical
Islamic movements. Neo-liberal economic policies have destroyed
traditional economies and turned millions of rural peasants into a new
urban underclass populating the teeming slums of such cities as Cairo,
Tunis, Casablanca and Teheran. Though policies of free trade and
privatization have resulted in increased prosperity for some, far more
people have been left behind, providing easy recruits for Islamic
activists rallying against corruption, materialism and economic injustice.
10. The U.S. response to Middle Eastern
terrorism has thus far been counter-productive.
The September 11 terrorist attacks on the
United States has highlighted the threat of terrorism from the Middle
East, which has become the country's major national security concern in
the post-cold war world. In addition to Osama bin Laden’s underground
Al-Qaeda movement, which receives virtually no direct support from any
government, Washington considers Iran, Iraq, Sudan and Libya to be the
primary sources of state-sponsored terrorism and has embarked on an
ambitious policy to isolate these regimes in the international community.
Syria's status as a supporter of terrorism has ebbed and flowed not so
much from an objective measure of its links to terrorist groups as from an
assessment of their willingness to cooperate with U.S. policy interests,
indicating just how politicized "terrorist" designations can be.
Responding to terrorist threats through
large-scale military action has been counter-productive. In 1998, the U.S.
bombed a civilian pharmaceutical plant in Sudan under the apparently
mistaken belief that it was developing chemical weapons that could be used
by these terrorist networks, which led to a wave of anti-Americanism and
strengthened that country’s fundamentalist dictatorship. The 1986
bombing of two Libyan cities in response to Libyan support for terrorist
attacks against U.S. interests in Europe not only killed scores of
civilians, but -- rather than curb Libyan-backed terrorism -- resulted in
Libyan agents blowing up a Pan Am airliner over Scotland in retaliation.
Military responses generally perpetuate a cycle of violence and revenge.
Furthermore, failure to recognize the underlying grievances against U.S.
Middle East policy will make it difficult to stop terrorism. While very
few Muslims support terrorism -- recognizing it as contrary to the values
of Islam -- the concerns articulated by bin Laden and others about the
U.S. role in the region have widespread resonance and will likely result
in new recruits for terrorist networks unless and until the U.S. changes
its policies.
Stephen Zunes is an associate professor of
politics and chair of the Peace & Justice Studies Program at the
University of San Francisco. He serves as a senior policy analyst and
Middle East editor for the Foreign Policy in Focus Project.
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