The 'New Middle East' Bush Is Resisting
Wednesday, August 23, 2006; A15
President Bush and Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice may be quite right about a new Middle East being
born. In fact, their policies in support of the actions of their
closest regional ally, Israel, have helped midwife the newborn.
But it will not be exactly the baby they have longed for. For one
thing, it will be neither secular nor friendly to the United
States. For another, it is going to be a rough birth.
What is happening in the broader Middle East
and North Africa can be seen as a boomerang effect that has been
playing out slowly since the horrific events of Sept. 11, 2001. In
the immediate aftermath of those attacks, there was worldwide
sympathy for the United States and support for its declared "war
on terrorism," including the invasion of Afghanistan. Then the
cynical exploitation of this universal goodwill by so-called
neoconservatives to advance hegemonic designs was confirmed by the
war in Iraq. The Bush administration's dishonest statements about
"weapons of mass destruction" diminished whatever credibility the
United States might have had as liberator, while disastrous
mismanagement of Iraqi affairs after the invasion led to the
squandering of a conventional military victory. The country slid
into bloody sectarian violence, while official Washington
stonewalled and refused to admit mistakes. No wonder the world has
progressively turned against America.
Against this declining moral standing,
President Bush made something of a comeback in the first year of
his second term. He shifted his foreign policy rhetoric from a
"war on terrorism" to a war of ideas and a struggle for liberty
and democracy. Through much of 2005 it looked as if the Middle
East might finally have its long-overdue spring of freedom.
Lebanon forged a Cedar Revolution, triggered by the assassination
of its popular former prime minister, Rafiq Hariri. Egypt held its
first multi-candidate presidential election in 50 years. So did
Palestine and Iraq, despite harsh conditions of occupation. Qatar
and Bahrain in the Arabian Gulf continued their steady evolution
into constitutional monarchies. Even Saudi Arabia held its first
municipal elections.
But there was more. Hamas mobilized candidates
and popular campaigns to win a plurality in Palestinian
legislative elections and form a new government. Hezbollah in
Lebanon and the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt achieved similar
electoral successes. And with these developments, a sudden chill
fell over Washington and other Western capitals.
Instead of welcoming these particular elected
officials into the newly emerging democratic fold, Washington
began a cold war on Muslim democrats. Even the tepid pressure on
autocratic allies of the United States to democratize in 2005 had
all but disappeared by 2006. In fact, tottering Arab autocrats
felt they had a new lease on life with the West conveniently cowed
by an emerging Islamist political force.
Now the cold war on Islamists has escalated
into a shooting war, first against Hamas in Gaza and then against
Hezbollah in Lebanon. Israel is perceived in the region, rightly
or wrongly, to be an agent acting on behalf of U.S. interests.
Some will admit that there was provocation for Israel to strike at
Hamas and Hezbollah following the abduction of three soldiers and
attacks on military and civilian targets. But destroying Lebanon
with an overkill approach born of a desire for vengeance cannot be
morally tolerated or politically justified -- and it will not
work.
On July 30 Arab, Muslim and world outrage
reached an unprecedented level with the Israeli bombing of a
residential building in the Lebanese village of Qana, which killed
dozens and wounded hundreds of civilians, most of them children. A
similar massacre in Qana in 1996, which Arabs remember painfully
well, proved to be the political undoing of then-Prime Minister
Shimon Peres. It is too early to predict whether Prime Minister
Ehud Olmert will survive Qana II and the recent war. But Hezbollah
will survive, just as it has already outlasted five Israeli prime
ministers and three American presidents.
Born in the thick of an earlier Israeli
invasion, in 1982, Hezbollah is at once a resistance movement
against foreign occupation, a social service provider for the
needy of the rural south and the slum-dwellers of Beirut, and a
model actor in Lebanese and Middle Eastern politics. Despite
access to millions of dollars in resources from within and from
regional allies Syria and Iran, its three successive leaders have
projected an image of clean governance and a pious personal
lifestyle.
In more than four weeks of fighting against the
strongest military machine in the region, Hezbollah held its own
and won the admiration of millions of Arabs and Muslims. People in
the region have compared its steadfastness with the swift defeat
of three large Arab armies in the Six-Day War of 1967. Hasan
Nasrallah, its current leader, spoke several times to a wide
regional audience through his own al-Manar network as well as the
more popular al-Jazeera. Nasrallah has become a household name in
my own country, Egypt.
According to the preliminary results of a
recent public opinion survey of 1,700 Egyptians by the Cairo-based
Ibn Khaldun Center, Hezbollah's action garnered 75 percent
approval, and Nasrallah led a list of 30 regional public figures
ranked by perceived importance. He appears on 82 percent of
responses, followed by Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad (73
percent), Khaled Meshal of Hamas (60 percent), Osama bin Laden (52
percent) and Mohammed Mahdi Akef of Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood (45
percent).
The pattern here is clear, and it is Islamic.
And among the few secular public figures who made it into the top
10 are Palestinian Marwan Barghouti (31 percent) and Egypt's Ayman
Nour (29 percent), both of whom are prisoners of conscience in
Israeli and Egyptian jails, respectively.
None of the current heads of Arab states made
the list of the 10 most popular public figures. While subject to
future fluctuations, these Egyptian findings suggest the direction
in which the region is moving. The Arab people do not respect the
ruling regimes, perceiving them to be autocratic, corrupt and
inept. They are, at best, ambivalent about the fanatical Islamists
of the bin Laden variety. More mainstream Islamists with broad
support, developed civic dispositions and services to provide are
the most likely actors in building a new Middle East. In fact,
they are already doing so through the Justice and Development
Party in Turkey, the similarly named PJD in Morocco, the Muslim
Brotherhood in Egypt, Hamas in Palestine and, yes, Hezbollah in
Lebanon.
These groups, parties and movements are not
inimical to democracy. They have accepted electoral systems and
practiced electoral politics, probably too well for Washington's
taste. Whether we like it or not, these are the facts. The rest of
the Western world must come to grips with the new reality, even if
the U.S. president and his secretary of state continue to reject
the new offspring of their own policies.
The writer is an Egyptian democracy
activist, professor of political sociology at the American
University in Cairo, and chairman of the Ibn Khaldun Center for
Development Studies.